Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 85South Africa
Padi Rubber Crumbing (Pty) Ltd v Corec Equipment (Pty) Ltd and Another (85567/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 85 (31 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 January 2022
Headnotes
only in relation to the first ground relating to the failure to plead cancellation concerning the agreement between the plaintiff and the first defendant.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Padi Rubber Crumbing (Pty) Ltd v Corec Equipment (Pty) Ltd and Another (85567/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 85 (31 January 2022)
Padi Rubber Crumbing (Pty) Ltd v Corec Equipment (Pty) Ltd and Another (85567/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 85 (31 January 2022)
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sino date 31 January 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/ NO
(3)
REVISED
CASE NO:
85567/19
DATE: 31 JANUARY 2022
In the matter between:-
PADI
RUBBER CRUMBING (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff/Respondent
and
COREC
EQUIPMENT (PTY) LTD
First
Defendant/First Excipient
LESLEY
FRANZ COETZEE
Second Defendant/Second
Excipient
JUDGMENT
SKOSANA AJ
[1]
The excipients, who are the defendants in the action, have brought an
exception to the
respondent’s/plaintiff’s particulars of claim.
To avoid confusion, I refer to the parties as in the main action.
[2]
The exception stands on two legs, namely:
[2.1] The
failure by the plaintiff to plead cancellation of the contract
between it and the first defendant or to
allege the service of a
notice of cancellation in order to entitle the plaintiff to claim
restitution; and
[2.2] The
failure by the plaintiff to plead that the alleged misrepresentation
by the second defendant induced the
plaintiff to conclude the alleged
contract with the first defendant.
[3]
According to the plaintiff’s particulars of claim, the claim
against the first defendant
stems from an oral agreement which was
concluded between the plaintiff and the first defendant for certain
services to be rendered
by the first defendant for the benefit of the
plaintiff and in respect of which the plaintiff was to pay to the
first defendant certain
amounts.
[4]
The oral agreement was structured in such a way and the subsequent
arrangements between
the parties were such that the plaintiff would
pay for the services before they were rendered and as a result of
which the plaintiff
paid to the first defendant a total amount of
R2 041 365-00. In breach of such oral agreement, so the
particulars of claim
allege, the first defendant failed to render the
services as required by such contract.
[5]
In paragraph 19 of the particulars of claim, the plaintiff alleges
that a letter of
demand was sent to the second defendant notifying
him of the breach and demanding payment of the aforementioned sum of
money.
[6]
In relation to the second defendant, who is the sole director of the
first defendant,
the plaintiff bases his claim on the fact that the
second defendant had represented to the plaintiff that he had
manufactured tyre
recycling plants that produce rubber crumbs that
are suitable to be used for bitumen rubber binding compound suitable
to be used
in the asphalt manufacturing process, which representation
was not true and caused the plaintiff to suffer loss and/or damages
in
the sum of R2 041 365-00. The plaintiff also alleges
that the defendant’s action amounts to a contravention of
section
76(3)(a)
of the
Companies Act no. 71 of 2008
in that the second
defendant had failed to act in good faith and for a proper purpose.
[7]
It is further alleged that the second defendant is personally liable
to the plaintiff
in the afore-mentioned sum on the basis of
section
218(2)
read with
section 77(2)(a)
and (b) of the
Companies Act.
[8
]
FIRST GROUND OF EXCEPTION
The money claimed by the
plaintiff in terms of its particulars of claim is money that had been
paid by the plaintiff to the first
defendant in
lieu
of the
services that were allegedly never rendered. It follows therefore
that the plaintiff is not enforcing the contract in the
form of
specific performance but seeks restitution. For, if the plaintiff was
seeking specific performance, it would have required
the first
defendant to perform the services or satisfy the obligations that it
undertook in terms of the contract which was to build
an end of life
tyre crumbling plant.
[9]
It is also common cause that the oral agreement concluded between the
plaintiff and
the first defendant did not contain a cancellation
clause. On the other hand, the particulars of claim do not allege
that a notice
of cancellation was served on the first defendant nor
do the particulars of claim allege that they themselves constitute
such notice
of cancellation. It follows therefore that the plaintiff
has not alleged that the right of cancellation has accrued to it.
The
decision of
Datacolor
International (Pty) Ltd v Intermarket (Pty) Ltd
[1]
is to the effect that a cancellation does not become effective nor
does a right to cancel accrue until such cancellation is conveyed
to
the other party.
[10]
More apposite is the decision of
Merry
Hill (Pty) Ltd v Engelbrecht
[2]
where the learned Judge of appeal quoted with approval the statement
of law by Friedman JP from
Bekazaku
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Pam Holding properties (Pty) Ltd
[3]
as follows:
“
When one
party to a contract commits a breach of a material term, the other
party is faced with an election. He may cancel the contract
or he may
insist upon due performance by the party in breach. The remedies
available to the innocent party are inconsistent. The
choice of one
necessarily excludes the other, or, as it is said, he cannot both
approbate and reprobate. Once he has elected to pursue
one remedy, he
is bound by his election and cannot resile from it without the
consent of the other party”.
[11] The
above accurate statement of our law exposes the defects in the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim
in this case. The plaintiff does
not seek to claim specific performance but instead seeks restitution,
a remedy available only consequent
upon cancellation. The plaintiff
therefore ought to have made the necessary allegation with a view to
later prove such cancellation.
In the absence thereof, the
particulars of claim lack the necessary averments to sustain a cause
of action in this regard and are
therefore excipiable.
[12] With
regard to the claim against the second defendant, the defendants
contend that the plaintiff has
not alleged that the conduct of the
second defendant induced the plaintiff to conclude the contract with
the first defendant. In
this regard it is important to quote the
following paragraphs of the particulars of claim:
“
8.
The Second Defendant, in the interactions mentioned above, advised
Padi that:
8.1
He was an engineer of many years’ experience;
8.2
He had designed and manufactured different types of machines;
8.3
He had experience in manufacturing tyre recycling machines that
produce rubber crumbs used as bitumen
rubber binding compound;
8.4
A similar plant that he manufactured is used in Mpumalanga; and
8.5
It would take about 8 weeks to manufacture the entire plant that was
sought by the Plaintiff.
9.
Impressed by the apparent experience of the Second Defendant and
on
the strength of the above representations
by the Second
Defendant, the Plaintiff decided to enter into an agreement with the
Second Defendant for the purchase [of] the plant.”
“
21.
The Second Defendant advised Padi that he had manufactured tyre
recycling plants that produced rubber
crumbs that are suitable to be
used as bitumen rubber binding compound suitable to be used in the
asphalt manufacturing process,
when that was, in fact not true
causing the Plaintiff to suffer a loss and/or damages in the sum of
R2 041 365-00”
[my
underlining]
[13] As
is evident from the underlined portion of paragraph 9 of the
particulars of claim quoted above, the
plaintiff entered into the
oral agreement on the strength of the representations made to him by
the second defendant. There is therefore
a clear allegation of the
link between the representations made by the second defendant and the
resultant oral agreement. Consequently,
it is my view that the
particulars of claim contain an allegation that the representations
made by the second respondent induced
the plaintiff to conclude such
contract and that such representation led to the loss as claimed.
[14] It
is trite law that when an exception is considered, the whole pleading
must be assessed. In my assessment
therefore, the exception in
respect of the claim against the second respondent is bad and must
fail.
[15] As
regards costs, it is clear that the defendants have only achieved
partial success and therefore the
plaintiff was also justified in
opposing the exception. There is therefore no need for a costs order
against any of the parties.
[16] In
the result, I make the following order:
[16.1] The exception is
upheld only in relation to the first ground relating to the failure
to plead cancellation concerning
the agreement between the plaintiff
and the first defendant.
[16.2] The exception is
dismissed only in relation to the second ground in respect of the
claim against the second defendant.
[16.3] The plaintiff is
hereby granted leave to amend the particulars of claim, as it may be
advised, within 10 days from the
date of this order.
[16.4] There is no order as
to costs.
DT
SKOSANA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff/Respondent:
Adv MJS Langa
Instructed
by:
Padi Incorporated Attorneys
Counsel
for the First & Second Defendant
s/Excipients
:
Adv AJ Reyneke
Instructed
by:
Du
Preez and Associates
c/o WH Mayhew
Attorneys
Date
heard:
27
January 2022
Date
of Judgment:
31 January 2022
[1]
[2000] ZASCA 82
;
2001 (2) SA 284
(SCA)
para 29
[2]
2008 (2) SA 544
(SCA)
para 15
[3]
1996 (2) SA 537
(C) at
542 E-F
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