Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 126South Africa
Tek-cent Glass & Aluminium (Pty) Ltd v Belo & Kies Construction (Pty) Ltd (16580/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 126 (22 February 2022)
Headnotes
as a result of rejected work; and, (b) alleged "contractor variations";
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tek-cent Glass & Aluminium (Pty) Ltd v Belo & Kies Construction (Pty) Ltd (16580/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 126 (22 February 2022)
Tek-cent Glass & Aluminium (Pty) Ltd v Belo & Kies Construction (Pty) Ltd (16580/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 126 (22 February 2022)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: 16580/2021
22/2/2022
In the matter between:
#
TEK-CENT
GLASS & ALUMINIUM (Pty) LTD
Applicant
and
BELO
& KIES CONSTRUCTION (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an
application wherein the Applicant seeks to enforce compliance by the
Respondent with an adjudication award that was handed
down by the
adjudicator on 21 February 2021. The persistent failure by the
Respondent to comply, without delay, has resulted in the
present
application.
[2]
The Respondent is
opposing the application on the basis that the adjudicator's
determination is unenforceable as the adjudicator had
exceeded his
jurisdiction. It appears further that the Respondent surmises that
this application has been brought prematurely in
that the Respondent
had given a notice of dissatisfaction to both the Applicant and the
adjudicator subsequent to the receipt of
the adjudication decision.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
[3]
The Applicant and the
Respondent are parties to a written subcontract agreement which
incorporates the provisions of the JBCC Nominated/Selected
Subcontract Agreement Edition 5 of July 2007 ('the N/S agreement')
[4]
The pertinent terms
applicable to the subcontract are;
4.1
Clause 1.8 provides
that the written agreement, including this clause, may not be
terminated, varied by any agreement or addendum,
added to or deleted,
unless in writing and signed by both parties;
4.2
Clause 40.1 provides
that in the event of a disagreement between the parties arising out
of or concerning the written agreement or
its termination, either
party may give notice to the other for the resolution of the
disagreement;
4.3
In terms of Clause
40.2, should the disagreement not be resolved within ten (10) working
days of receipt of the notice referred to
in clause 40.1,it shall be
deemed that a dispute has occurred. The dispute shall be referred by
the party who gave notice for an
adjudication. (in terms of the
edition of the JBCC Rules for Adjudication applicable at the time the
dispute was declared.)
4.4
Clause 40.3.3 is to
the effect that the adjudicator's decision shall be binding on the
parties and shall be given effect to without
delay, unless and until
the decision has subsequently been revised by an arbitrator.
4.5
In terms of Clause
40.3.4, should either party be dissatisfied with the decision of the
adjudicator, or should no decision have been
made by the adjudicator
within the period set in the rules, such party may give notice of its
dissatisfaction to both the other party
and the adjudicator within
ten (10) working days of receipt of the decision or within ten (10)
working days of the expiry of the
date by which a decision ought to
have been given. The dissatisfied party may then refer the dispute to
arbitration.
[5]
On the 5 November
2019 the Applicant submitted a notice of a disagreement concerning an
interim payment certificate no. 6 dated October
2019 in terms of
clause 40.1 of the agreement. The disagreement could not be resolved
within ten working days and was, accordingly,
deemed to be a dispute
in terms of clause 40.2.
[6]
On the 21 January
2020 the Applicant and the Respondent confirmed the appointment of
Advocate Lee Harding as the adjudicator who was
then placed in
possession of the information necessary to facilitate the
adjudication. The Respondent had also submitted a counterclaim.
[7]
Upon completion of
his task, the adjudicator handed down the decision to both parties on
the 21 February 2021 in the following terms:
"21
Belo & Kies are directed to certify the amount of R1 232 538-00
(excluding VAT) for alleged
defective work which has been certified
by the Principal Agent and R 174 888-00 for Variations (excluding
VAT,),
less
R 75 1911-18 for retention (excluding VAT) and R
89 315-39 (excluding VAT) for damages, being the total amount of R 3
269 008-58
(excluding VAT) or R 3 790 409-87 (including VAT).
22
Belo & Kies are
to make payment to Tek-Cent of the amount of R3 790 409- 87
(including VAT),
less
R 2 882 362-43
(including VAT) for monies previously paid, being R 908 047-44
(including VAT) now due.
23
Belo & Kies are
to pay Tek-Cent interest at the Prescribed Rate, from 6 March 2020 to
date of payment.
24
The Counterclaim is
dismissed.
25
Each Party to pay its
own costs and share the adjudicator's fees.
EVENTS FOLLOWING THE DECISION
[8]
Despite
the adjudicators decision and subsequent correspondence between the
parties, the Respondent has failed to comply with the
determination
of the djudicator and in breach of the terms of clause 40.3.3 of the
agreement.
[9]
The
Respondent filed its notice of dissatisfaction on 11 March 2021.
[10] On
the 01 April 2021, the Applicant launched this application against
the Respondent seeking the relief
that;
10.1
The respondent is
ordered to forthwith give effect to the adjudication award handed
down on 21 February 2021 by Advocate Lee Harding;
10.2
Pursuant to the
abovementioned award, the Respondent is ordered to pay the
Applicant:-
10.2.1
R908 047,44
(including VAT); and
10.2.2
interest on the
abovementioned amount at the Prescribed Rate from 6 March 2020 to
date of payment.
10.2.3
The Respondent is
ordered to pay the costs of this application.
OPPOSITION
[11]
The Respondent filed
its notice to oppose the application on the 16 April 2021, followed
by its answering affidavit on 17 May 2021.
In essence, the Respondent
premises its opposition on the notice of dissatisfaction it had given
to both the Applicant and the adjudicator
on 11 March 2021 in
alleging that the dispute between it and the Applicant will now be
determined by an arbitrator.
[12]
In substantiation of
its contention that the Applicant is not entitled to the relief
sought, the Respondent has set out numerous grounds
in the answering
affidavit, mainly critiquing the adjudication process of the
adjudicator which the Respondent alleges was replete
with flaws,
including that the adjudicator had exceeded his mandate. In respect
of the latter aspect, the Respondent alleges that
the adjudicator's
mandate was to determine,
inter
alia;
12.1
the Applicant's claim
for certification and payment of: (a) an amount withheld as a result
of rejected work; and, (b) alleged "contractor
variations";
12.2
The Respondent's
counterclaim, and,
12.3
The Respondent's
claim that, should the adjudicator determine that any payment is due
to the Applicant, such determination be stayed
pending; (a) final
determination of the arbitration proceedings to follow at the behest
of the Respondent, and, (b) issue of a final
payment advice to the
Applicant.
[13]
The use of the words
'inter alia', above, without an explicit identification of the
specific aspects in respects of which the adjudicator
had allegedly
exceeded his mandate, negates the critique in that the words
presuppose the existence of additional aspects for adjudication.
[14]
At para 10.1 to 10.5
of the answering affidavit, the Respondent sets out what it refers to
as "tacit, alternatively implied"
terms {which} are basic
prerequisites (conditions) that must be complied with and fulfilled,
before any adjudication determination
can (and ought to) be given
effect to as provided for in clause 40.3.3."
[15]
The above contentions
by Respondent appear in my view to be subjectively selected by the
Respondent to suit it circumstances. In this
regard I make reference
to the matter of
Tubular
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v DBT Technologies (Pty) Ltd
2014 (1) SA 244
(GSJ)
the court
had the following to say in regard to the interpretation of tacit or
implied terms in an agreement:
"The
decision in Bombela
is supported by
a
number of judgments, both here and abroad,
dealing with similar provisions in different standard forms of
construction contracts which
point clearly to
a
practice
relating to the immediate enforcement of an adjudicator's decision
leaving it to the dissatisfied party to refer the decision
to
arbitration in order to set it aside until so set aside it remains
binding. Evidence of this approach is relevant on two- basses:
firstly, it assists in the interpretation of the relevant contractual
provisions, and secondly it is material which would have been
present
in the mind of the parties when they contracted and thus admissible
as
evidence of background circumstances".
[16]
In the present case
the agreement between the parties expressly stipulates that there
shall be no variation of the agreement, unless
in writing and signed
by both parties. The Respondents' contention that tacit or implied
terms should have been read in the agreement
is therefore untenable.
[17]
The Respondent
furthermore avers that the Applicant had failed to disclose in its
statement of claim the conclusion of a written settlement
agreement
which would ostensibly had exonerated it from liability. It is also
the Respondents version that both parties had not made
submissions to
the adjudicator regarding the settlement agreement, but instead, the
adjudicator had determined the question whether
the Respondent was
entitled to rely on tacit or implied terms to amend the Subcontract
(or terms not expressly stated in the Settlement
Agreement) - (the
unasked question). To this end the Respondent submits that the
adjudicator had exceeded his jurisdiction and the
determination is a
nullity and accordingly unenforceable.
[18]
It is unfathomable
that a party to a favourable written settlement agreement would elect
not to ensure that the terms thereof are
core in the adjudicator's
adjudication, but in the same breath, critique the adjudicator for
not having considered those terms. On
the Respondent's own version,
neither party made submissions relating to the Settlement Agreement.
Worst still is the Respondent's
opportunistic raising of the alleged
failure by the adjudicator, in proceedings for the enforcement
adjudication, to justify a submission
that the adjudication award is
unenforceable.
[19]
On 20 and 21 October
and 04 November 2020, the Respondent alleges to have requested the
adjudicator for an opportunity to make oral
submissions prior to a
determination being made. The request was turned down by the
adjudicator on 5 November 2020.
[20]
Subsequent to
requesting certain clarifications from both parties on 29 January
2021 and having received responses from them, the
adjudicator handed
down his adjudication and award on 21 February 2021.
[21]
At para 25 of its
heads of argument, the Respondent makes further submissions in
support of its averment that the adjudication of
the adjudicator is a
nullity and unenforceable. The Respondent states, without cogent
substantiation that:
"21.1
the findings of the adjudicator are legally untenable to the extent
that it (sic) constitutes
a
material
misdirection, which cannot be enforced;
21.2
The adjudicator
did not determine the respondent's claims;
21.3
The adjudicator
did not give reasons for all his determinations; and
21.4
The issues raised
in the Respondent's notice of dissatisfaction."
APPLICANT'S
POINTS IN LIMINE TO THE OPPOSTION
[22]
The Applicant has
taken several exceptions to the respondent's opposition, being that
by;
22.1
serving its notice of
intention to oppose on 15 April 2021, and
22.2
serving its answering
affidavit on 13 May 2021, the Respondent had failed to comply with
the Rule 6(5)(d)(ii) in that the answering
affidavit was served five
days out of time, yet the Respondent has not sought condonation or
provide any reason or explanation for
the late service of the
answering affidavit;
[23]
The Applicant had
presented an ambiguous submission regarding the late filling of the
Respondents' answering affidavit. This submission,
in my view could
refer to either there being no valid opposing answering affidavit
before the Court, or generally that there is no
merit in the
Respondent's defence. Factually, there was neither an application for
the condonation of the late filing of the answering
affidavit nor an
explicit objection to argument being presented on the basis of the
contents of the answering affidavit.
ANALYSIS
[24]
The question whether
the Applicant is entitled to the relief sought hinges on a variety of
findings this Court is enjoined to make
in the circumstances of this
case. These range, in the first instance on the unexpressed stance of
the Applicant to the admissibility
of the Respondent's affidavit in
opposition of the relief sought by the Applicant. I prefer to address
this aspect later In my consideration
of the over-all events in this
matter.
[25] It is
common cause that the subcontract agreement between the parties
states that the adjudicator's adjudication
is binding on the parties
who shall comply therewith without delay, unless it is set aside by
an arbitrator. It is needless to state
that the engagement of an
arbitrator is not an automatic event following an arbitration, but
requires an active role on the part
of a party who is dissatisfied
with the outcome of the adjudication process; in the present matter,
the Respondent.
[26] The
n/s agreement requires a dissatisfied party to give notice of
dissatisfaction to both the other party
(Applicant) within ten (10)
working days of the receipt of the adjudication and award. The
adjudication and award were given to the
parties on 21 February
2021.The Respondent, being the dissatisfied party, gave notice of its
dissatisfaction as aforementioned on
the 11 March 2021 -far more than
the stipulated period of ten days from the receipt of the
adjudication. The Applicant has referred
to correspondence between
the parties' legal Representatives emanated from the Applicant's
attorneys specifically enquiring from
the Respondent's attorneys on
progress regarding the notice of dissatisfaction, more specifically
the name of Respondent's proposed
arbitrator.
[27] The
responses were either that no instructions had been received yet, or
that the Respondent was not
available and would be contacted later
and, ultimately, there was no response at all to follow up
correspondence. While the Respondent
has referred to correspondence
from its attorneys to the Applicant's attorneys regarding the issue,
it has not expressly stated that
the Applicant has been or is
un-cooperative. The adjudicator's award made on 21 February 2021
still stands and has been not complied
with without delay. In
Tubular
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v DBT Technologies (Pty) Ltd
2014 (1) SA 244
(GSJ) para 22 to 23 the Court addressed aspects pertaining to a delay
and the expected actions on the part of the dissatisfied party
in the
following terms:
"The
decision in Bombela is supported by
a
number
of judgments, both here and abroad, dealing with similar provisions
in different standard forms of construction contracts which
point
clearly to a practice relating to the immediate enforcement of an
adjudicator's decision leaving it to the dissatisfied party
to refer
the decision to arbitration in order to set it aside. Until so set
aside it remains binding."
[28] In
the present matter there are no demonstrable reasonable steps afoot
on the part of the Respondent
to have the dispute subjected to
arbitration. The exclusion of the possibility that a calculated
delaying tactic is at play in these
circumstances is an
impossibility. The delay persists to the detriment and prejudice of
the Applicant. In
Stefanutti Stocks (Pty) Ltd v SB Property (Pty)
Ltd
2013 JDR 2441 (SGJ) para 16 the Court stated the following;
''The
purpose of the policy to implement the adjudicator's decision is
a/so
to
obviate the tactical creation of disputes with
a
view
to the postponement of liability."
From a time perspective, the
Respondent's slow pace to achieving its goal of having the matter
subjected to arbitration is, my in
view, a ploy to delay payment to
the Applicant.
[29]
Having set out what the Respondent referred to as tacit or implied
terms the adjudicator allegedly failed
to consider in his
adjudication, the Respondent ended with a prayer that, in the event
that the adjudicator finds that the Respondent
was to pay the
Applicant, the adjudicator should suspend the payment pending
finalisation of the arbitration process - a process
the Respondent
clearly appears to misuse as a mechanism to avoid timeous payment to
the Applicant.
[30] With
regard to the reference to tacit or implied terms in an agreement,
the Respondent appears to be
oblivious to the non-variation clause
contained in the agreement. The Respondent seem to suggest that the
adjudicator should have
drawn inferences which, in its subjective
mind, ought to have been drawn. In the case of
Fir
&
Ash
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Cronje
&
Others
[2007 JOL
20668
(C) para 5 the Court expressed an approach to the
interpretation of non explicit or tacit terms in a contract as
follows:
''In deciding whether the
suggested term can be inferred, the court will have regard primarily
to the express terms of the contract
and the surrounding
circumstances under which it was entered into.
Furthermore,
a
tacit
term will not be inferred if it would be in conflict with the express
provisions of an agreement."
[31]
The Respondent has
not demonstrated that the inferences it seeks to have been drawn
would not have been in conflict with the explicit
terms of the
agreement and, importantly, that the terms of the Settlement
Agreement it sought to rely on were themselves not in conflict
with
the explicit terms of the N/S agreement.
[32]
The Respondent, in my
view, as a participant in the construction industry, ought to be
aware of the Rules governing the adjudication
process and, in
particular, that the adjudicator is entitled to determine the manner
in which he intends to conduct the adjudication
process. The
adjudication rules in Annexure "RA2" to the replying
affidavit state, inter alia, that the adjudicator may;
32.1
conduct a hearing,
but he is not obliged to do so (rule 5.1.1);
32.2
determine a dispute
on the basis of the submitted documents only and/or an inspection of
work related to the dispute as may be appropriate
(rule 5.5.2);
32.3
either party may
apply to the High Court for the enforcement of the determination
(rule 6.2.2).
CONCLUSION
[33]
The Respondent, in my
view, has not raised any defence nor triable issue negating the
granting of the relief sought by the Applicant.
Instead, the overall
conduct of the Respondent points to obstructionism solely to delay
payment to the Applicant. The application
must, therefore, succeed.
COSTS
[34]
In awarding the costs
for this application, I take into consideration that the Applicant
has unjustifiably been prejudice by the Respondent's
conduct both in
disregard of the terms of the agreement and the mandatory requirement
that the Respondent complies with the adjudication
without delay.
Furthermore, the Respondent did not only fail to give notice of
dissatisfaction timeously as provided for in the agreement.
but has
also done the same in respect of the filing of its answering
affidavit. No explanation for the delay, particularly in the
latter
instance, has been given nor was there an application for the
condonation of the late filing of the answering affidavit made.
I can
find no reason why punitive costs should not be ordered in these
circumstances.
ORDER
[35]
Resulting from the
findings in this judgment, the following order is made:
1.
The
Respondent is ordered to forthwith give effect to the adjudication
award handed down on 21 February 2021 by Advocate Lee Harding;
2.
The
Respondent is ordered to pay the Applicant:-
2.1
R908 047,44
(including VAT); and
2.2
interest on the
abovementioned amount at the Prescribed Rate from 6 March 2020 to
date of payment.
2.3
The Respondent is
ordered to pay the costs of this application on an Attorney and own
client scale.
M. MBONGWE J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA.
APPEARANCES
For the Applicant:
Mr S
Bunn (Attorney with the right of
appearance in
High court)
Instructed
by:
Hewlett
Bunn Incorporated
Scott Hewlett & Julie-Anne
Harwood
C/O
Klagsbrun Edelstein Bosman Du Plessis Incorporated
220 Lange
Street
Nieuw
Muckleneuk
Pretoria
.
For
the Respondent:
Adv A.J Daniels SC with Adv C. De Villiers-Golding Helen
Ellis
Attorneys
Instructed by: Hellen Ellis
Mattisson C/O Macrobert Inc
Cnr Justice Mohamed & Jan
Shoba
Street
Brooklyn
Pretoria.
Date of hearing: 08 September 2021
JUDGMENT
TRANSMITTED ELECTRONICALLY TO THE PARTIES/ LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES ON
THE 22nd FEBRURARY 2022.
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