Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 38South Africa
Cargo Carriers Proprietary Limited v Broad-Based Black Empowerment Commission and Others (76000/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 38; [2022] HIPR 190 (GP) (28 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
28 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Cargo Carriers Proprietary Limited v Broad-Based Black Empowerment Commission and Others (76000/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 38; [2022] HIPR 190 (GP) (28 January 2022)
Cargo Carriers Proprietary Limited v Broad-Based Black Empowerment Commission and Others (76000/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 38; [2022] HIPR 190 (GP) (28 January 2022)
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sino date 28 January 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
2022-01-28
Case
Number: 76000/2019
In
the matter between:
CARGO
CARRIERS PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Applicant
and
BROAD-BASED
BLACK ECONOMIC
EMPOWERMENT
COMMISSION
First Respondent
SIMON
SANKU MADUNA
Second Respondent
PIET
VUYSILE MJIKA
Third Respondent
PAUL
LITSOANE
Fourth Respondent
MOSES
MOLIFI TEFFO
Fifth Respondent
MKHONGWANE
JOHN MATONA
Sixth Respondent
RAMAGAGA
PAUL MONWADIBE
Seventh
Respondent
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
[1]
Cargo Carriers Proprietary [Cargo Carriers] sought the review and
setting aside of the
final finding of the Broad-Based Black Economic
Empowerment Commission [the B-BBEE Commission] made on 18 April 2019,
as well as
substitution of the decision with a decision dismissing
the Second to Seventh Respondents complaints against Cargo Carriers.
These
respondents were in terms of Cargo Carriers Owner-Driver
Initiative [the ODI] owner-drivers. They are collectively, without
any disrespect
intended, referred to as the complainants. No relief
was sought against the complainants.
[2]
The B-BBEE Commission is a statutory body established in terms of
s13B of the Broad-based
Black Economic Empowerment Amendment Act No
46 of 2013 [the B-BBEE Act]. The objectives of the B-BBEE Act are
broadly to promote
economic transformation enabling meaningful
participation of black people in the economy. It seeks to achieve a
substantial change
in the racial composition of ownership and
management structures, and in the skilled occupations of existing and
new enterprises.
It strives to promote access to finance for black
start-ups, small-, medium- and micro enterprises and cooperatives and
black entrepreneurs
enhancing their access to financial and
non-financial support. It seeks to increase workers to own and manage
existing and new enterprises
by increasing their access to economic
activities, infrastructures and skills training.
[3]
In terms of s13F of the B-BBEE Act the functions of the B-BBEE
Commission are inter
alia to oversee, supervise and promote the
adherence with the B-BBEE Act in the interest of the public. In
relation to this matter
they are the body receiving complaints
relating to B-BBEE matters and have the duty to investigate a
complaint received. It determines
the format and the procedure to be
followed when conducting an investigation. The B-BBEE Commission
makes findings as to whether
any B-BBEE initiative involved a
fronting practice and may publish any finding or recommendation of
any investigation in a manner
it deems fit.
[4]
The process to be followed upon receiving a complaint is set out in
the regulations.
In terms of regulation 15 an initial assessment must
be made to determine whether the complaint warrants an investigation.
The B-BBEE
Commission received a complaint from only the second
respondent on 2 August 2016, two years after he had terminated his
ODI contracts.
The tenure of the complaint was that he was employed
by Cargo Carriers and had applied for an owner-driver’s vacancy for
the Western
Cape Bulk Operations. To that end he had concluded a
Service Agreement, Management Agreement and Finance Agreement. He
worked as
such for one month when the problem started with Cargo
Carriers wanting to use his funds from his business account and he
was denied
access to his business account. He was informed that he
had no access until he ‘covered 48 months.’ He did not understand
the
empowerment deal and was not explained the objectives of the
deal. He was thus surprised that he received a letter from Mercedes
Benz indicating that he owed monies. He asked for compensation from
Cargo Carriers for unspecified outstanding monies due, and in
addition, that Cargo Carriers settle any remaining debt with Mercedes
Benz, but with the complainant retaining ownership of the truck.
[5]
The Commission made a preliminary assessment based only on the
complaint and found that
‘the allegations made by the complainant
indicated practices or conduct that was contrary to the objectives
and spirit of the B-BBEE
Act.’ The Commission further found
that since the complaint related to an ‘Owner-Driver scheme which
may be important to
investigate immediately to discount fronting.’
This was compounded by the fact Cargo Carried had denied the
complainants direct
access and management of their bank accounts
which directly or indirectly diminished, frustrated or undermined the
attainment of
the objectives of the B-BBEE Act.
[6]
The preliminary investigation/assessment informed Cargo Carriers that
the second respondent
seemingly did not derive any financial benefit
from this initiative leaving him in debt with Mercedes Benz. He
was inhibited
from participating in the core activities of the ODI as
he had no control of the business and finances. Cargo Carriers may
have used
the second respondent to gain a higher B-BBEE status
without an economic benefit flowing to the second respondent. The
matter may
also raise ‘possible unidentified unconscionable
conduct’. Cargo Carriers was thus on 16 December 2016 issued a
notice to investigate
by the Commission. This was accompanied by a
letter to the director of Cargo Carriers at the time, Mr M Bolton [Mr
Bolton] detailing
the complaint as above, as well as the preliminary
assessment requesting specific documentation by 9 January 2017.
[7]
In a letter responding to this notice to investigate the B-BBEE
Commission was informed
that the complainant had the wrong party as
the complainants had a contractual relationship with the entity
Ezethu; Cargo Carriers
being a 56 % shareholder in Ezethu Logistics
(Pty) Limited [Ezethu], thus a distinct and separate legal entity to
Cargo Carriers.
It was explained that when the ODI was concluded the
complainants were not employed by Cargo Carriers. Pursuant to the
complainants
responding to the advertised posts they were exposed to
psychometric testing and thorough training. A suite of agreements was
concluded
after a 4-day training session. The service agreement
provided that they would be a contractor for Ezethu providing road
transportation
services. A cooling-off period was provided to consult
with their families.
[8]
It was further explained that in terms of the Management Agreement
the complainant had
agreed that he would not have authority to
withdraw funds from, or any other authority over, his business
account. This was agreed
to ensure that the income was optimally
preserved for his benefit and to install financial discipline. The
complainants were entitled
to draw from the reserve in the business
account after certain debts and expenses were paid. The revenue paid
to the complainants
went to cover their operational expenditure,
their financial and regulatory obligations and overhead costs. The
complainants received
an interest free loan from Ezuthu of R50 000
to assist with the financing of the working capital.
[9]
All the agreements and the implications thereof were explained to the
complainants.
There were numerous meetings between the complainants
and Ezethu’s representatives. The second respondent on 5 January
2015 exercised
his right to terminate the agreement in terms of the
agreement. Cargo Carriers at no time had any control over the manner
in which
the complainants chose to participate in the initiative.
[10]
Cargo Carriers denied that there was any fronting. Cargo Carriers
concluded an agreement with Afrisam
with effective date of 1 August
2011 signed on 2 April 2014. On 26 November 2012 Afrisam requested
Cargo Carriers to transport an
estimate of 30 000 tons of cement
from Ulco to Afrisam’s Western Cape Ready Mix Plants. On 4 December
2012 Afrisam accepted
Cargo Carriers’ transportation proposal. In
early 2013 Cargo Carriers internally advertised for new positions
under the ODI. On
23 April 2013 the complainants concluded the
service agreements with Ezethu. The Commission was informed that
Ezethu was not in any
way dependent upon the establishment of this
ODI to run the Afrisam project and neither Cargo Carriers or Ezethu
used the second
respondent to attain a higher B-BBEE status. Ezuthu’s
B-BBEE status did marginally improve.
[11]
Cargo Carriers also denied any unconscionable conduct; the drivers
were trained and informed and the
ODI initiatives were a long
standing practice that had started in August 2003; this ODI with
these complainants, was not to benefit
Ezethu.
[12]
On 16 January 2017 the Commission delegated its investigative powers
to Ubuntu Business Advisory and
Consulting (Pty) Ltd [UBAC]. UBAC
informed Cargo Carriers that the third to seventh respondents had now
joined the complaint of the
second respondent. There is then a
toing and froing of correspondence between Cargo Carriers and UBAC
seeking meetings and
documents. There is also an attempted
settlement of the matter, but the board of directors decided that
there was no rationale
to pay any amounts to the complainants and the
settlement did not come to fruition.
[13]
On 28 September 2017, 20 days after the notice to investigate
received from the B-BBEE Commission, Mr
Bolton received a summons
issued by UBAC wherein the complaint is brought against him
personally. The content of the summons has
the same narrative as the
notice to investigate. Thereupon there was correspondence between the
UBAC and Cargo Carriers pertaining
to documents being requested and
extensions sought within which to deliver the documents sought.
[14]
On 7 June 2018 the B-BBEE Commission published its preliminary
findings which I find prudent to quote:
‘
5.1
that Cargo Carriers Limited benefited from the ODI by extending its
contract with Afrisam whilst
Ezethu Logistics (Pty) Ltd benefited
from an improved BEE status as a result of the owner driver scheme to
the detriment of the Complainants,
however they were both complicit
in a scheme together with HRG Management, to manage the owner
driver’s business in a manner that
would take away their
decision-making powers and access to funds, to the extent that the
Complainants were no more than ordinary
drivers in the business;
5.2
that Cargo Carriers Limited indicated that they provided business
management training to the Complainants
however the Respondents were
unable to provide evidence of such training. In the absence of
the Respondents assisting the owner
driver to earn sufficient funds
to pay off the residual amount at the end of the 48-month contract
with Mercedes Benz Financial Services
South Africa (Pty) Ltd, the
Complainants would not have been able to take possession of the
trucks and would have been in the same
position as that of the
ordinary drivers after engaging in a Black Empowerment Initiative,
which was allegedly supposed to empower
the Complainants’
5.3
that Mr. Bolton attempted to distance Cargo Carriers Limited from the
Complainants relationship
with Ezethu Logistics (Pty) Ltd and the
conclusion of the contract with Mercedes Benz Financial Service South
Africa (Pty) Ltd whilst
the Cargo Carriers Limited was instrumental
in securing the contract with Afrisam and assisting the Complainants
in obtaining finances
from Mercedes Benz Financial Services South
Africa (Pty) Ltd;
5.4
that Mr. Sprenger’s letter to Mercedes Benz Financial Services
South Africa (Pty) Ltd indicates
that the Respondents considered
themselves to be in control of the Complainants vehicles and were
supposedly supportive of the Complainants
and were very much a part
of the empowerment initiative, however the Respondent chose not to
intervene when the Complainants complained
about the misuse of their
fund;
5.5
that the Respondents insisted that the Complainants utilise services
of Mr. Hennie Gouws to manage
their business despite receiving
several complaints about the manner in which Mr. Hennie Gouws
deprived the Complainants the right
of access to the business
accounts.
5.6
that Cargo Carriers Limited deprived the Complainants the economic
benefits they reasonably anticipated
from the proceeds of the
deliveries they were making as truck drivers and being part of the
Owner Driver initiative. The Complainants
were denied the
ability to exercise the rights flowing from such arrangement in a
manner that hindered transformation imperatives;
and
5.7
that the conduct of the respondents were contrary to the objectives
of the B-BBEE Act and may amount
to fronting practice or
misrepresentation of B-BBEE status violation of the B-BBEE Act, which
are criminal offences.’
[15]
The recommendations of the B-BBEE Commission were that Cargo Carriers
must pay reasonable compensation
with the calculation thereof to be
approved by the B-BBEE Commission. The Cargo Carriers and Ezethu
directors should undergo training
on corporate governance. Cargo
Carriers should attend a session on the Act through an accredited
Agency. Cargo Carriers was also
to afford the complainants to attend
similar training to empower the complainants to exercise the rights
and obligations flowing
from their rights as Owner Drivers.
[16]
The B-BBEE Commission afforded Cargo Carriers 30 days to respond to
these preliminary findings before
it issued its final findings. Cargo
Carriers responded to these findings, but requested clarity on what
decision-making powers were
taken away from the complainants. It,
inter alia, denied that Cargo Carriers or Ezethu used the
complainants to attain a higher B-BBEE
status. To illustrate this the
BEE certificates issued before the ODI and after the ODI were
attached to their response. Mr Gous
in an affidavit attached the
dates, venues and training agendas of the complainants between May
2013 and December 2014. It informed
the Commission that the Afrisam
Agreement was not at all dependant on this ODI. Cargo Carriers set
out that there was economic benefit
to the complainants because the
revenue paid to them covered
inter alia
operational expenses
and overhead costs. Shortfalls that may have occurred was due to lack
of compliance by the complainants and
business risks.
[17]
A final finding was published on 18 April 2019. It is common cause
that the final findings were a copy
and paste of the preliminary
findings and I accordingly do not repeat the final findings. No
sanction against Cargo Carriers was
implemented.
What is an ODI?
[18]
The ODI is not a foreign concept to Cargo Carriers or the B-BBEE
Commission. An ODI’s whole purpose
is to attain the goals of the
B-BBEE Act; to promote meaningful participation of previously
disadvantaged people by attaining ownership
of small businesses
thereby enhancing economic participation. The ODI enhances access to
financial support to, for instance, conclude
an agreement with
Mercedes Benz to have access to a truck. It is also common cause that
Cargo Carriers had implemented ODI’s since
2013. ODI’s are
recognised as a B-BBEE initiative and are considered in measuring a
company’s B-BBEE status.
Did Cargo
Carriers benefit from the ODI in augmenting its contract with Afrisam
to the detriment of the complainants?
[19]
Both the findings in paragraphs 5.1 and 5.7 of the B-BBEE
Commission’s final findings relate to Cargo
Carriers and Ezethu
benefitting; Ezethu from an improved B-BBEE-status and Cargo Carriers
by extending its contract with Afrisam.
These benefits were to the
detriment of the complainants. This Court accepts that a company can
spin an intricate web of contracts
to facilitate fronting and
frustrate the purpose of the B-BBEE Act, thus requiring a Court to
pierce the corporate veil. This investigation
would include the
timing of contracts, concluded by whom and to what purpose and the
same investigation must certainly be employed
by the B-BBEE
Commission. The court has to apply the trite principles of
Plascon-Evans
[1]
when deciding whether this ODI was concluded entirely to the benefit
of the companies and consequent detriment to the complainants.
[20]
I find it necessary to, at this stage, restate the trite principle
that a court will not
mero
motu
trawl through annexures to an affidavit without specific references
being incorporated in the affidavit.
It is not open to a respondent to merely annex to his affidavit
documentation and to request the court to have regard to it. What
is
required is the identification of the portions thereof on which
reliance is placed and an indication of the case which is sought
to
be made out on the strength thereof.
[2]
Where
reliance is placed on facts it must be pertinently set out or
referenced. The affidavits of the B-BBEE Commission were seriously
lacking in setting out on what facts and findings of their agent,
UBAC, they were relying on in coming to its findings. The UBAC
report
and annexures exceeds 1100 pages and the court is merely informed
that the B-BBEE Commission relied on all the findings thereon.
Counsel for the B-BBEE Commission was informed that if a finding in
the UBAC-report was not specifically referenced under oath the
court
was not undertaking a search for foundational evidence and findings
in the UBAC report. In motion proceedings the affidavits
constitute
the pleadings and evidence.
[21]
It is common cause that on 1 August 2011 Cargo Carriers concluded an
agreement with Afrisam to provide transportation
services to Afrisam.
On 4 December 2012 the augmented portion of that agreement was
outsourced to Ezethu. Afrisam approached Cargo
Carriers to transport
cement in the Western Cape. On 26 November 2012 Cargo Carriers
submitted its proposal for the Western Cape
seeking a letter of
intent and setting out in paragraph 7 that if Afrisam required it
Cargo Carriers could have two of the vehicles
operated by Owner
Drivers ‘to contribute towards the Afrisam Equality Development
program’. On 4 December 2012 Afrisam sent out
its Letter of Intent,
not requesting any Owner-Driver vehicles. Neither in the contract
with Afrisam, or the proposal to augment,
was an Owner-Driver
Initiative a requirement for Cargo Carriers, or Ezethu to fulfil,
before the contract could to be implemented.
There is simply no
evidence put up by the B-BBEE Commission that this ODI concluded, on
23 April 2013, was required by Afrisam.
There are no facts put
up supporting the assertion that Cargo Carriers’ only intent with
this ODI was to extend its contract with
Afrisam. In fact, the result
of the augmented contract between Ezethu and Afrisam, benefitted
Afrisam, not Cargo Carriers or Ezethu
because Afrisam needed and
required a higher black shareholding, which Ezethu had, the ODI did
not fulfil this need of Afrisam. This
is set out as follows by Mr
John Sprenger [the ODI manager] in an email dated 3 March 2014
‘Afrisam required their contract to
be with Ezethu Logistics
because of their 30 % black shareholding (i.e. Cargo Carriers 7.19
black shareholding did not meet the Afrisam
requirements.’ Ezethu
did benefit as it fulfilled Afrisam’s requirements to secure the
business, but not because of the ODI.
[22]
In summary: Cargo Carriers had an existing contract with Afrisam,
Cargo Carriers was approached by Afrisam,
the letter of intent did
not require Owner-Drivers, and the ODI was concluded after the
Western Cape contract was concluded. Cargo
Carriers by means of
Ezethu did augment its contract with Afrisam and benefitted in a
business sense, but not to circumvent the B-BBEE
Act or to the
detriment of the complainants. The only real winner in terms of the
Act was Afrisam that obtained more than 100 % procurement
points by
insisting to contract with Ezethu due to its level 2 rating. The
finding that Cargo Carriers benefitted is irrational and
not
connected to the evidence before the Commission. This finding is to
be reviewed and set aside in terms of s6(2)(f)(ii) of the
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act [PAJA] in that this finding was not
rationally connected to the information before the Commission.
Was the ODI
concluded to improve Ezethu’s BBE status to the detriment of the
complainants?
[23]
The B-BBEE Commission found that Ezethu benefitted from an improved
B-BBEE status to the detriment of
the complainants. There was also an
averment that Cargo Carriers achieved ‘B-BBEE scorecard points’.
This averment in the answering
affidavit is unfounded. In the
answering affidavit there is not a single fact set out to sustain
this bald statement. Cargo Carriers
to the contrary played open cards
with the court and submitted that Ezethu’s BBE status had
marginally improved, but was not materially
affected due to the
Owner-Drivers appointment. It attached the BEE scorecards of Ezethu
before the ODI and thereafter, reflecting
same. It was not denied
that the marginal improvement was also due to the appointment of more
female black managers. The court is
bound to accept the version of
Cargo Carriers.
[24]
But, in any event, it must be stressed that Afrisam sought to
contract with Ezuthu, as it was at that time,
and did not require an
ODI to be created. The ODI was thus not implemented to gain a
contract. As ODI’s are recognised as a B-BBEE
initiative and are
considered in measuring a company’s B-BBEE status implementing an
ODI is not fronting, unless the ODI did not
succeed in its purpose;
to enable black former employees to own a small business that is
economically viable.
Was the ODI
structured to enable the owner-drivers to become the owners of a
business?
Training
[25]
The B-BBEE Commission found that the complainants were only drivers
and not owner-drivers because they
were not trained or, inadequately
trained. The B-BBEE Commission found that Cargo Carriers Limited
indicated that they provided business
management training to the
Complainants but Cargo Carriers was unable to provide evidence of
such training.
[26]
Cargo Carriers submitted that the complainants were subjected to
psychometric testing. The psychologist,
Ms Oberholzer of Nova Human
Capital Solutions measured the mental alertness, verbal
understanding, numerical reasoning, dependability
and safety
instrument and personalities of the complainants. This exercise was
clearly to the benefit of Cargo Carriers and the complainants
to
determine whether the complainants had inter alia the capacity to
understand, communicate and have numerical reasoning to become
an
owner of a small business. It was necessary to ensure that the ODI
was not doomed from the start with the complainants set up
for
failure due to a lack of necessary personal attributes. I did not
understand Cargo Carriers to assert that this was training,
it was a
necessary assessment.
[27]
Cargo Carriers submitted that the complainants were thoroughly
trained and set out the following facts
in support thereof:
‘
The breakdown
of the four-day training session was:
79.1
An initial two days was spent at Cargo Carriers Head Office on 22 and
23 April 2013. In these two days:
79.1.1 Mr
Sprenger in his capacity as Owner Driver Manager gave a presentation
of the ODI.
79.1.2 Mr Gous in
his capacity as the Management Company Representative of the Owner
Drivers gave a presentation of the services he
would be able to
provide.
79.1.3 A detailed
explanation was given jointly by Mr Sprenger and Mr Gous of the
budget parameters and accounting requirements and
how the
complainants would be remunerated.
79.1.4 The
Service Agreements and Management Agreements were explained to the
complainants in detail.
79.1.5 After
explaining and discussing each topic, Mr Gous assisted the
complainants to open their Business Bank Accounts and register
as
Provisional Taxpayers and VAT Vendors.
79.1.6 Mercedes
Benz Financial Services explained the Vehicle Purchase Agreement and
Full Maintenance Agreement to the complainants
and the complainants
signed the Agreements with the assistance of Mr Gous.
79.1.7 The
Insurance Service Provider (i.e. comprehensive insurance for their
Vehicles) explained the Insurance Agreements to the
complainants and
the complainants signed the Agreements, with the assistance of Mr
Gous.
79.1.8 The
Financial Services Provider (i.e. Credit Life Insurance for their
Vehicles and Medical Aid) explained the Credit Life and
Medical Aid
Products to the complainants and the complainants signed the
Agreements, with the assistance of Mr. Gous.
79.1.9 A final
joint presentation was given to the complainants by Mr Sprenger and
Mr Gous where the following topics were covered:
The aim of the
ODI; The budget parameters; The importance of the
Accounting results and meeting with Mr Gous regularly
to be mentored
and to be given feedback. All general queries were discussed
and explained.
79.2
The Third day session was held at Sasol Branch on 24 April 2013.
On this day:
79.2.1 The
complainants met with Mercedes Benz representatives, Mr Sprenger and
Mr Gous. The new MB 2644LS/33 Actros 3 vehicles
were handed
over to the complainants.
79.2.2 Driver
training was given to the complainants, as these were new state of
the art vehicles. The Full Maintenance Agreement
requirements
were explained to the complainants and all queries were addressed.
79.3
The Fourth day was spent at the Bloemfontein Branch on 25 April
2013. On this day:
79.3.1 The
complainants met with Nico Gerber (the Divisional Director)(“Mr
Gerber”) and his Operational Team in the presence of
Mr Sprenger
and Mr Gous.
79.3.2 The
Operational and Work Instructions of the Branch were discussed in
detail and all queries explained. Each complainant
was required
to sign off the Work Instructions presented to them.
79.3.3 The
complainants were introduced to the Branch staff that they had to
interact with: Administration, Workshop and Operational.
In the presence of Mr Gerber and his staff the budget/operational
parameters were explained to the complainants and agreed to by
the
complainants.
79.3.4 The
complainants were given every opportunity to highlight any concerns
they might have had prior to starting to operate on
26 April 2013.’
[28]
Mr Sprenger and Gerber gave on-going training, as did Mr Gous. The
appointment of Mr Gous was in line
with clause 3.11 of the Management
Agreement to provide ongoing training to facilitate the development
of skills and knowledge required
for successful development of the
business. The method employed was personal on the job training.
Attached to his affidavit was a
schedule setting out the monthly
ongoing training. Mr Gous stated that despite his best attempts
he received very little interest
or the necessary attention from the
complainants. He reported it to the Managers of the ODI. His
problems, and the reason for this,
is best described by himself as
follows:
‘
It is
important to note that the attitude of the ODs in general (apart from
one exception) have always been negative towards not only
the account
meetings but also to me explaining the methods used, accounting
standards to be maintained and strict financial management
of their
affairs. This made training of a very complicated matter subject
extremely difficult, to a point where I indicated to John
Sprenger my
reluctance to carry on doing the work and trying to explain and train
the ODs. A replacement management company will
have the same issues
to content with and I cannot foresee a solution to the problem if the
status quo is maintained. By relaxing
the strict financial control,
though, WILL lead to non-payment issues and a supplier relationship
breakdown with the resultant unsuccessful
empowerment scheme. I make
this statement based on the experience after most ODs withdrew their
funds from the business bank accounts
and thereby making it
impossible to maintain my service delivery as per the management
agreement.’
[29]
In the answering affidavit the four-day training course is boldly
denied by the B-BBEE Commission. In
argument it was submitted that
there was no proof that the complainants underwent adequate training
and that the four-day training
in business management never took
place. The on-the-job training was ineffective and did not remedy the
inadequate training.
[30]
The court must ask itself whether the training, which indeed took
place, empowered the complainants to
understand the concept of the
ODI, their responsibilities and the benefit to them. These
complainants were not people of the street,
they were drivers. They
knew what transportation of loads entailed, they knew working
schedules around transporting loads and knew
that there were to be
days off necessitating other drivers to take over. They knew that
punctuality with loads was necessary. They
presumably did not have
budgeting and financing experience. At first blush a four-day course
might seem inadequate to empower the
drivers on those two topics, but
they were not left to their own devices. They pertinently concluded a
Management Agreement, with
an independent party, to hold their hand
pertaining to these issues. There was on- the-job-training, with
proof thereof attached
to the replying affidavit of Caro Carriers, in
contrast to not a trace of evidence from the B-BBEE Commission that
there was no training
provided. The finding that Cargo Carriers
‘indicated that they provided business management training to the
Complainants however
the Respondents were unable to provide evidence
of such training’, is unfounded, untrue and irrational on the
evidence before the
Commission and must be reviewed and set aside in
terms of s6 of PAJA.
Did the
Management agreement constitute an inherent deficiency in the ODI
contrary to the objectives of the B-BBEE Act?
[31]
The B-BBEEE Commission found that the complainants were prevented
from exercising any autonomy in selecting
a financier or management
company for the ODI. The crux of the matter and main complaint of the
complainants was they were not allowed
access to their business
accounts whatsoever without consent from HRG, the Management Company
represented by Mr Gous. They were informed
that after 48 months they
would have full access. The complainants did not understand that they
owed Mercedes for the trucks because
Cargo Carriers had all the
financial authority. It was argued that the complainants were
prevented from exercising true independence
and autonomy in respect
of the financial affairs of the business while being subjected to
high financial risk. The finding was, and
I repeat for context, that
‘
Cargo Carriers Limited deprived the complainants the economic
benefits they reasonably anticipated from the proceeds of the
deliveries
they were making as truck drivers and being part of the
owner-driver initiative. The complainants were denied the ability to
exercise
the rights flowing from such arrangement in a manner that
hindered transformation imperatives and HRG Management managed the
owner
driver’s business in a manner that took away their
decision-making powers and access to funds. Cargo Carriers insisted
that the
Complainants utilise serves of Mr. Hennie Gous to manage
their business despite receiving several complaints about the manner
in
which he deprived the complainants the right of access to the
business accounts.’
[32]
I intervene here to set out the breaches of the agreements committed
by the complainants. In a letter
dated 12 July 2013 the complainants
were informed that they were withdrawing funds from their business
accounts in contravention
of clause 3.14.24 of the Management
Agreement. The complainants were using EDC cards for the purposes
other than to purchase fuel
or pay toll fees and did not make an
effort to load a minimum of 33 tons at the Afrisam Ulco Plant. On 5
August 2013 a further letter
was dispensed to the complainants
setting out in detail the procedures to be followed pertaining to
loads and that they had a responsibility
to arrange and manage
drivers to avoid delays. The complainants failed to attend the
management meetings.
[33]
Early 2014 six of the complainants wrote a letter setting out that
Cargo Carriers and Ezethu were benefitting
from fronting them, with
no empowerment, their salaries were a disgrace and they wanted a new
accountant of their choice as Mr Gous
was too much on management’s
side. Mr Sprenger wrote to the complainants again setting out the
terms and conditions of the ODI
as concluded and requested any
suggestions for improvements to the ODI. None was received. On 1
March 2014 Mr Sprenger held a meeting
with six of the complainants
inter alia
addressing the concerns raised by the Afrisam
Owner- Drivers, an analysis of the loads done by the 6 Afrisam
Owner-Drivers and the
relief drivers for the 9 months ending 31
January 2014. The budget for the year ending 28 February 2015 was
also on the agenda. Also
on 1 March 2014 the complainants were
informed that their refusal to take loads when issued with an order
was a problem as there
was no relief drivers available to execute the
orders.
[34]
On 5 June 2014 the complainants were informed that communication
regarding vehicle movement and availability
was not being
communicated to the controller in time which had caused conflict
between Afrisam and Ezethu. The complainants were
reminded that they
were responsible to avail their vehicles and that replacement drivers
must be ready to take over to avoid unnecessary
delays.
[35]
On 23 June 2014 the fifth respondent was upon his non return from
leave, by letter informed, that Ezethu
had reserved its right to
cancel the Services Agreement. On 9 September 2014 the second
respondent was in writing warned regarding
his failure to share the
relief driver and his own absence. The fourth respondent was charged
with unlawful use of the EDC card and
misappropriation of funds. A
further R8 200 was withdrawn from his business account without
permission resulting in insufficient
funds available to pay business
expenditure. On 16 December 2014 Ezethu terminated the Service
Agreement between Ezethu and the fourth
respondent. The third
respondent also failed to return from his one week off-cycle to
undertake a load to Afrisam and was informed
that it constituted
breach of the Service Agreement. The second respondent terminated his
contract on 5 January 2015. Two years later
he lodged the complaint
with the Commission.
[36]
These breaches are boldly denied by the B-BBEE Commission on the
basis that they were not informed of
the breaches, thus the breaches
were unknown to it, and therefor denied. A party that has no
knowledge of a fact cannot deny such
fact, but must set out that it
has no knowledge of such fact. Aside from that, the B-BBEE Commission
had to have knowledge of these
breaches because the documents
pertaining to the breaches were submitted to the Commission. The
B-BBEE Commission argued that in
any event, it is not mandated to
investigate contractual disputes and argued the contractual breaches
are irrelevant to the disputes
before court. But, even it was
relevant, then a finding of fronting was still apposite.
[37]
Cargo Carriers denied that the ODI had any inherent deficiencies but
submitted that this ODI failed as a result
of the material
contractual breaches by the complainants. The complainants displayed
a lack of discipline and refused to take heed
of advices given to
them during the training programme. At the risk of repetition, the
complainants had signed service agreements
with Ezethu to provide
road transportation services as independent contractors. They also
signed Management agreements with HRG Management
Services CC [HRG]
who provided various accounting and financial management services.
HRG was to impart financial management and business
compliance
skills. The complainants also signed Financing and Insurance
agreements with Mercedes Benz Financial Services (Pty) Limited
[Mercedes-Benz]. They also signed an agreement with ABSA Bank Limited
to open a bank account. The complainants failed to arrange
replacement drivers, refused to take contractually required loads and
failed to attend management meetings They unlawfully used the
EDC
cards and withdrew funds from their business accounts contrary to the
terms of the management agreements. The conduct of the
complainants
affected their earning capacity and the service rendered to Afrisam.
[38]
The B-BBEE Commission cannot ignore breaches committed by the
complainants when coming to a finding.
An ODI can only exist with at
least two parties contracting. An ODI by its very nature requires
contractual regulation. For the ODI
to be successful both parties
must fulfil their contractual obligations. If the breach of the
contracts by one of the parties led
to ODI’s failure, it cannot be
brushed aside.
[39]
The starting point is whether the ODI was inherently deficient
because of the Management agreement; did
the Management Agreement
concluded as part of the ODI offend the objectives of the B-BBEE Act?
The Management Agreement was concluded
for three years [36 months].
Mr Gous was the face of the management agreement. The Management
agreement provided that Mr Gous would
inter alia
provide the
complainants with legal assistance, secretarial assistance, training,
reports for records and complete financial accounting
service. He
would receive and manage all income and expenditure. He would receive
the income and pay all the debts and expenses starting
with the truck
instalment, insurance premiums, maintenance and repairs costs of
vehicle, fuel purchases etc. He would ensure that
there would be an
adequate contingent reserve equivalent to operational costs of two
months. The complainants had no authority to
withdraw funds from the
business account or deal with the account in any way.
[40]
It is difficult to reconcile the argument that there was inadequate
training on financial management
with the argument that the
complainants instantly should have had access to their business
accounts. A driver cannot overnight become
an owner-driver, but the
ODI must give a driver the capacity to over a period become an
owner-driver. If not, the ODI had failed
in achieving its goal and
could frustrate the objects of the B-BBEE Act. Precisely due to the
basic training a Management agreement
is a good tool to ensure that
the complainants are not afloat in the business world If Cargo
Carriers had not assisted the complainants
they would not have
obtained finance for a truck, let alone at a financier of their
choice. The financed truck is the vehicle to
the business, but comes
at a high monthly premium. Ensuring that all the business expenses
are paid ensures the pathway to a successful
business and the driver
becomes a successful owner- driver. On the facts the complainants
were disgruntled that they could not access
their business accounts,
blamed Mr Gous for this and consequently did not heed or attend his
meetings. They proceeded to be absent
from work, failed to deliver
loads and organise relief drivers. There was an abuse of the card to
be utilised only for petrol and
toll gates. Ezethu and Mr Gous
attempted to assist the complainants, but this assistance was
rebuked. Ezethu employed three relief
drivers to assist, but to no
avail. This attitude of the complainants led to the ODI failing and
not an inherent deficiency of the
ODI.
[41]
Cargo Carriers set out that it implemented ODI’s, structured as is
this ODI, in Swaziland with the
‘
Coca-Cola contract’
, ‘
the
RSSC Alcohol Contract’
and the ‘
RSSC Cane Contract’
and in South Africa the ‘
BME Rossing mine contract’
and
the ‘Lafarge contract’. Those ODI’s lasted
their
full
duration and the owner-drivers either sold the trucks and received
value for it, or the owner-drivers developed their own logistics
company with some of them now sub-contracting for Cargo Carriers. In
response to these averments the B-BBEE Commission denied the
‘
remaining allegations made in these paragraphs, and in
particular, deny the relevance thereof to this application. Despite
Cargo Carriers’
self-proclaimed success of their previous and
subsequent ODIs in these paragraphs, I note that in arriving at the
decision against
Cargo Carriers, the Commission did consider that
some of the ODI’s implemented by Cargo Carriers, were allegedly
being successfully
implemented.’
The Commission goes further
that if the ODI’s were on the same terms as the ODI before court
then those ODI’s should also be subjected
to scrutiny in the
interest of the public.
[42]
The B-BBEE Commission is aware that similar ODI’s implemented by
Cargo Carriers were successful rendering
the argument that the ODI’s
had an inherent deficiency as untenable; drivers had transformed to
owner-drivers. The fact that the
autonomy over the business account
was restricted for three years did not frustrate the achievement of
the objectives of the B-BBEE
Act. It sought to achieve the transfer
of skills to run a business and its business account with the
ultimate result that the driver
became an owner-driver. The
owner-driver is not inhibited from substantially participating in the
core activities of the ODI; the
complainants were the main focus of
the core activity. The complainants earned salaries but could not dip
into the business account
for a period and under strict conditions.
This did not deprive them of participating in the core activity that
they had to manage.
The owner-driver would receive the economic
benefits and become the owner of a business.
[43]
The findings of the B-BBEE Commission in paragraphs 7.1.1.4; 7.1.1.5
and 7.1.1.6 were unreasonable and
must be reviewed and set aside in
terms of s6(2)(h) of PAJA. These findings also need to be set aside
in terms of s6(2)(e)(iii) of
PAJA as the B-BBEE Commission ignored
relevant considerations when coming to its findings. The serious
breaches committed by the
complainants played a central role in the
failure of the ODI and could not have been ignored. The B-BBEE
Commission need not have
civil jurisdiction to take cognisance of
this relevant factor.
Fronting
[44]
The facts of this matter together with this courts findings
unequivocally render a finding of fronting
irrational and such
finding is to be reviewed and set aside in terms of s6 of PAJA. The
Commission in argument submitted that the
implementation of this ODI
satisfied the criteria of fronting practice under subsection (a) and
(d) of the fronting practice definition
in section 1 of the B-BBEE
Act.
‘
a transaction,
arrangement or other act or conduct that directly or indirectly
undermines or frustrates the achievement of the objectives
of this
Act or the implementation of any of the provisions of this Act,
including but not limited to practices in connection with
a B-BBEEE
initiative – [
(a)
in terms of which black persons who are
appointed to an enterprise are discouraged or inhibited from
substantially participating in
the core activities of that
enterprise;
(b)
…
(c)
…
(d)
involving the conclusion of an agreement with another enterprise in
order to achieve or enhance
broad-based black economic empowerment
status in circumstances in which –
(i)
there are significant limitations, whether
implicit or explicit, on the identity of suppliers, service
providers, clients or customers;
(ii) the
maintenance of business operations is reasonably considered to be
improbable, having regard to the resources available;
(iii)
the terms and conditions were not
negotiated at arm’s length and on a fair and reasonable basis.’
[45]
Not a single jurisdictional fact for fronting was established by the
Commission. The ODI was not concluded
for improved B-BBEE status or
to obtain the contract with Afrisam. There was no misrepresentation
to the complainants; they signed
the contracts with the Management
Contract acting as the mechanism for fiscal discipline for the ODI to
succeed. I had already found
that the complainants could participate
in the main activity, they were the owner-drivers and were only
limited in accessing their
business accounts for a period for fiscal
discipline and transfer of financial skills. I accordingly find it
unnecessary to expand
on fronting.
[46]
All the findings of the B-BBEE Commission are to be reviewed and set
aside and I accordingly make the
following order:
46.1
The decision is reviewed and set aside;
46.2
The decision is substituted with a decision dismissing the complaint;
46.3
The Commission is ordered to pay the costs of the application, such
costs to include those consequent upon
the employment of two counsel.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE NUMBER:
76000/2019
HEARD ON: 8
October 2021
FOR THE APPLICANT:
ADV. J. BABAMIA SC
ADV. H. MUTENGA
INSTRUCTED
BY: Werksmans Attorneys
FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT: ADV. R. BEDHESI SC
ADV. L. BEDHESI
INSTRUCTED
BY: State Attorney, Pretoria
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28 January 2022
[1]
Plascon-Evans Paints
(Pty) Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A);
Director
of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009
(2) SA 277
(SCA);
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008
(3) SA 371
(SCA) at 375D-F
[2]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and Others
1999
(2) SA 279
(T) at 321F-G;
Van
Zyl v Government of the Republic of South Africa
2008
(3) SA 294
(SCA) at 306D-E
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