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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Venter v Kuduskop Estate (Pty) Ltd and Others (75594/2013)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 295 (14 April 2022)
Venter v Kuduskop Estate (Pty) Ltd and Others (75594/2013)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 295 (14 April 2022)
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sino date 14 April 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 75594/2013
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE
:
14 APRIL 2022
In
the matter between:
JAN
ADRIAAN
VENTER
Plaintiff
and
KUDUSKOP
ESTATE (PTY)
LTD
First
Defendant
KUDUSKOP
ECO ESTATE (PTY) LTD
Second
Defendant
MORNЀ
CHRISTOPHER
VILJOEN
Third
Defendant
SYLVIA
ANNELEA VILJOEN
Fourth
Defendant
JACOBUS
FREDERICK VILJOEN
Fifth
Defendant
JACOBUS
CAROLUS LODEWICUS COETZEE
Sixth
Defendant
JACOBUS
FREDERICK VILJOEN
Seventh
Defendant
ALBERTUS
JOHANNES COETZEE
Eighth
Defendant
J
U D G M E N T
This
matter has been heard in open court and otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this Division.
The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
[1]
Introduction
This is the
judgment in respect of an issue separated in terms of Rule 33 (4)
from the rest of the disputes in an action instituted
by an attorney
for the recovery of his fees. The separation was in respect of a
special plea of prescription raised by one of the
eight defendants.
Separation was ordered by Fourie J on 29 October 2014. The matter was
subsequently allocated to me in January
2022 to be dealt with and
case managed in terms of the Commercial Court Practice Directives of
this Division.
[2]
The special plea
The Sixth defendant’s special
plea is that, in respect of the plaintiff’s three claims, the
mandates which formed the
subject matter of the three claims, being
claims for payment of accounts for the rendering of professional
services and disbursements,
had been completed on 30 March 2007, 8
August 2007 and on 21 April 2010 respectively. It was further pleaded
that the claims “fell
due” on these three dates,
alternatively within a reasonable time thereafter, such a reasonable
time being not more than
30 days. Summons had only been served in
January 2014, that is more than 3 years after these dates.
Accordingly the sixth defendant
pleaded that the claims had become
prescribed in terms of
section 11
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
.
[3]
The contract between the parties
3.1
The plaintiff’s three claims are governed by
a “Cost Agreement” entered into with the plaintiff’s
predecessor,
being an erstwhile partnership of attorneys. Upon
termination of the partnership on 30 June 2009 and by way of a
written agreement
of session and delegation, the client files and
mandates of the defendants were transferred to the plaintiff, with
the acquiescence
of the defendants.
3.2
The relevant clauses of the “Cost Agreement”
are clauses 12 and 14, which read as follows:
“
12.
All accounts shall be in writing [and] be specified as set out supra
and shall, depending on your needs, be submitted
on an interim basis
or non-recurrently which accounts shall be payable within 14 days
after delivery thereof after which interest
at out bank overdraft
rate shall be levied …
14.
This agreement is furnished to yourselves with regard to the new
instructions received. Should you, or any
of your authorised
representatives submit subsequent instructions to us, such
instructions shall be dealt with on exactly the same
conditions
contained herein unless an amended agreement has been concluded for
purposes of such instructions
”
.
3.3
The “specifications” for the accounts
referred to the tariffs and amounts of fees and the “yourselves”
referred
to the respective defendants as clients of the plaintiff
(and his predecessor).
[4]
The chronology
4.1
As with all matters pertaining to disputes in
respect of extinctive prescription, chronology is all-important. At a
case management
meeting held before me on 22 February 2022, it was
agreed and directed, in terms of Chapter 5 of the Commercial Court
Practice
Directives, read with
Rule 38
that the evidence of the only
witness on whose evidence the plaintiff would rely (being that of the
plaintiff himself) would be
delivered by way of an affidavit. Dates
for the delivery of the affidavit and the exchange of heads of
argument were also agreed
on and consequently directed and the
hearing of argument proceeded before me on 4 April 2022 during court
recess. The sixth defendant,
being the only defendant who had raised
a special plea, objected to the tendering by the plaintiff of
affidavits by two other defendants.
These defendants took no part in
the proceedings, however and their affidavits had been procured some
time ago already. The plaintiff
thereafter disavowed any reliance on
those affidavits, as did the sixth defendant. The sixth defendant
chose not to deliver any
affidavit and accordingly the plaintiff’s
affidavit constituted the only evidence placed before the court.
4.2
The plaintiff’s affidavit spans some 13
pages and the portions thereof relevant to the issue of prescription,
with reference
to the remainder of the pleadings, conveyed the
following:
-
During August 2006, and while still a partner of
the erstwhile partnership of attorneys, the plaintiff’s
partner, Mr Kruse,
approached the plaintiff with a request to assist
existing clients, being the current sixth and eighth defendants.
These clients,
who are brothers, intended establishing a residential
estate (the estate) on a farm belonging to the Smangaliso Trust (the
Trust)
of which their brother-in-law was the controlling trustee. The
brother-in-law and the other trustees were cited in the present
proceedings as the third, fourth and fifth defendants. The estate was
intended to be the Kuduskop Estate, for which purpose Kuduskop
Estate
(Pty) Ltd and Kuduskop Eco Estate (Pty) Ltd have been incorporated.
These two companies are the first and second defendants
in this
action. The sixth defendant had been appointed by the trust as the
developer of the estate.
-
The plaintiff said that, due to the existing
professional relationship with the sixth and eighth defendants (also
referred to as
the Coetzee brothers) and the fact that the trust “was
not in the financial position to embark on and pay” for the
costs involved in the necessary Land Use Change Application which had
to be launched, a joint venture was established between the
Coetzee
brothers and the trust. The joint venture then concluded a
Contingency Agreement with the attorneys in terms of which the
fees
due to the attorneys for the rendering of professional services would
be paid by way of the proceeds of the sales of three
erven in the
proposed estate.
-
The affidavit then proceeded as follows:
“
5.
After successful procurement of the land use rights for the Estate,
and therefore execution of
the contingency brief, subsequent events
not envisaged in the Contingency Agreement culminated in:
5.1
An Appeal lodged against the Estate Approval to
the Eastern Cape Development Appeal Tribunal by several Objectors,
which Appeal
suspended the land use rights obtained;
5.2
The necessity to formally amend some of the
conditions incorporated in the initial Estate Approval obtained;
5.3
The refusal of Environmental Authorisation for
the development of the Estate and consequently the necessity to
Appeal such refusal
or to apply for exemption from complying with
such onerous statutory Environmental requirements in respect of the
Estate; and
5.4
A high Court Review Application which was
launched by the Environmental Authorities of the Eastern Cape
Province, against the Exemption
Approval which I ultimately procured
on behalf of the Joint Venture, in favour of the Estate.
6.
None of these subsequent events
were provided for in the Contingency Agreement and I refused to
further deal with same on a contingency
basis on behalf of the Joint
Venture and consequently demanded signature of my Firm’s
standard Cost Agreement and confirmation
that all my professional
fees earned in respect of these subsequent events, shall be governed
by the signed Cost Agreement at my
normal professional rates …
8
I consequently on that basis
successfully nullified the Appeal, procured the amendment of the land
use rights sought and successfully
obtained a Decision from the
Eastern Cape Development Tribunal by virtue of which the Estate was
excluded from the provisions of
the
National Environmental Management
Act 1998
. The aforegoing required several personal appearances in
Port Elizabeth before the relevant Tribunal and Appeal Tribunal.
9
I also, on behalf of the Joint
Venture, over a protracted period of more than 2 (two) years,
successfully opposed a subsequent Review
Application launched by the
relevant Environmental Authority against Exemption Approval obtained
and ultimately procured a positive
Environmental Authorisation in
favour of the Estate …
10
My involvement in these subsequent
events, as already alluded to above, entailed several attendances of
hearings and negotiations
in Port Elizabeth, which pertained to
matters which either suspended the execution of the land use rights
obtained in terms of
my contingency brief or were required as
prerequisites for realisation of the Estate and at all relevant times
were sanctioned
by the representatives of the Joint Venture on the
basis of my signed Cost Agreement, and all my appearances in Port
Elizabeth
were indeed attended by them or some of them.
11
11.1
My aforementioned successes however did not
culminate in a final proclamation of the Estate, since a diversity of
administrative
actions were still to be executed in terms of the
Conditions of Approval imposed and applicable other sets of
legislation before
the procured land use rights lawfully could vest
in the Farm of the Trust, and would have enabled the Farm owner (the
Trust) to
dispose of erven in such Estate.
11.2
One such requirement, i.e. the issue of a Water
Use Licence was dealt with by the Department of Water and Sanitation
in terms of
the
National Water Act 1998
, for purposes of which a
Water Consultant was appointed by the Joint Venture.
12
I was at all relevant times mindful
of the fact that the ultimate final vesting of the procured land use
rights and selling on the
erven would have rendered it not only
possible but convenient for the Joint Venture (who in the interim
established the First and
Second Defendants as commercial vehicles
for its intended development), to pay my fees in terms of the
Contingency Agreement and
in terms of the signed Cost Agreement.
13
I consequently, after conclusion of
the High Court proceedings in 2009, frequently enquired about
progress made in that regard (i.e.
the finalisation of the approved
land use rights), was told that the procurement of a Water Use
Licence was a tedious process,
which indeed suspended the execution
of the land use rights, and although I was repeatedly requested to
hold my accounts in abeyance,
I, in the interim, after the relevant
files were ultimately allocated to me on instruction of the
Defendants after my Firm as partnership
was dissolved, instructed my
office to draw my Bills of Cost in respect of the subsequent events
embarked upon by way of the signed
Cost Agreement.
14
During December 2010, I flew to
Port Elizabeth for a different matter and met the Seventh Defendant,
representing the Farm owner,
and who ostensibly was, at the time, in
control of the compliance requirements of the Estate, at the Airport,
to discuss the progress
made with the finalization of the Estate
Approval, as well as the payment arrangement in respect of my fees in
terms of the Contingency
Agreement and the signed Cost Agreement with
him.
15
15.1
At the time, my Bill of Cost were only
conceptually drawn by my internal staff, but reflected a fairly good
indication of the fees
due to me.
15.2
The Seventh Defendant was furnished with copies
of the draft Bill of Cost (which at that stage were not final, had
not been settled
by my Cost Consultant and did not contain any VAT
invoices or covering letters), which he undertook to discuss with the
other members
of the Joint Venture, and he requested me not to render
such accounts before he had the opportunity to discuss same and the
payment
arrangements in that regard with his Joint Venture colleagues
and myself …
16
I indicated to the Seventh
Defendant that the Bill of Cost shall be finalised in the new year
and that I would, before formal rendering
thereof, also endeavour to
discuss same with the other members of the Joint Venture. My office
finalised the Bills of Cost on 24
January 2011.
17
I however unsuccessfully
endeavoured to discuss such finalised Bills of Cost with the Coetzee
brothers, who referred all enquiries
to the Seventh Defendant, but I,
during February 2011, ultimately succeeded to intercept the Sixth
Defendant leaving the building
where I practice, after he consulted
with his now Attorney of record and my ex-partner, Mr Robert Kruse.
18
During such discussion with the
Sixth Defendant, I indicated to him what the ballpark aggregate
amount of legal fees outside the
ambit of the Contingency Agreement
equated to and enquired what payment arrangements have been discussed
with the other members
of the Joint Venture.
19
19.1
The Sixth Defendant intimated that the Estate
had not as yet realised, that he is not in possession of my draft
accounts, that no
final payment arrangements have consequently been
made and that he has had no discussion with the Seventh Defendant,
who was in
possession of the draft Bills of Costs since December
2010.
19.2
He undertook however to do so, especially in
circumstance where one of the last impediments for establishment of
the Estate, i.e.
a Water Use Licence, had according to him,
apparently at that stage successfully been procured. I cannot
remember whether I furnished
him with copies of my finalised accounts
on that day, but suspect that I would have done so.
20
All my subsequent enquiries to the
representatives of the Joint Venture were however ignored. When I
ultimately got hold of one
of the members of the Joint Venture, he
would refer me to the other and it became clear that there no longer
was any cooperation
between such members of the Joint Venture. I
indeed detected animosity between them, realised that the
finalisation of the Estate
was at risk and therefore also the payment
of my fees.
21
21.1
In such circumstances I decided to formally
draft a letter to all the members of the Joint Venture and to make
sure that my now
finalised accounts with VAT invoices dated 24
January 2011, were by registered post, served on all such members of
the Joint Venture
…
21.2
I received no response from such members of the
Joint Venture except for an acknowledgement of receipt from the
Seventh Defendant
dated 11 April 2011 …
22
My letter of 29 March 2011, to
which my finalised Bills of Costs and VAT invoices dated 24 January
2011 were attached, strictly
in accordance with my signed Cost
Agreement, afforded the Defendants 14 (fourteen) days to pay same and
therefore such accounts
became due and payable on 12 April 2011.
23
I was, despite repeated
unsuccessful enquiries in that regard, and personal subsequent
discussions with the Seventh and Eighth Defendants,
not successful to
procure payment of my accounts, even on the basis that the formal
realisation of the Estate should have realised
during this period,
and I indeed became aware of apparent Erf alienation actions embarked
upon by the Joint Venture, which circumstances
prompted me to issue
summons in respect of such outstanding legal fees on 13 December 2013
…
27
As a
consequence, there were very good reasons why I, despite having
received my first brief in 2006, and completed my instructions
in
2009, only finalised my Bills of Cost in January 2011 and formally
dispatched same to the Defendants on 29 March 2011. The Defendant
were acutely aware of such reasons and were indeed the orchestrators
thereof
”
.
[5]
The sixth defendant’s argument and the
evaluation thereof
5.1
It is trite that he who pleads extinctive
prescription, bears the onus in respect thereof. This includes the
proof of the date of
inception of the period of prescription, i.e.
when the period of extinctive prescription commences to run. See:
Harms
Amler’s precedents of
Pleadings
under the topic
“Prescription: Extinctive” and
Gericke
v Sack
1978 (1) SA 821
(A).
5.2
The sixth defendant’s case is as per its
special plea and the argument is that the period of extinctive
prescription started
to run, at the latest 30 days after date of
completion of the mandates by the rendering of the professional
services which made
up the subject matter of the three claims. The
sixth defendant saw these mandates as separate to each other (as they
have been
accounted for) but even if the three mandates were part of
one continuing mandate, namely to secure the necessary requirements
to establish the estate (apart from the services which form the
subject matter of the Contingency Agreement), then the last date
of
the performance thereof was 21 April 2010. The period of prescription
would then have commenced on 21 May 2010 and by 20 May
2013 all
claims in respect of which prescription had not been interrupted by
way of the institution of action, would have become
prescribed. In
this case, so the sixth defendant argues, that would include all the
plaintiff’s claims as action was only
instituted on 13 December
2013 and served in January 2014.
5.3
The sixth defendant further argued that the
plaintiff was overly nonchalant and so dilatory in the rendering of
his accounts, that
he should not be allowed to “capitalise”
on the argument that his claims only arose at the time he delivered
the accounts.
5.4
In this regard, the sixth respondent relied on the
following quotation from the judgment in
Jakobo
v Grimbeeck
(380/2013)
[2014] ZAFSHC
117
(17 August 2014): “
The law
expects a creditor such as the plaintiff to act reasonably and alert
and as a reasonable person and not to sit back in a
couldn’t-care-less altitude
”
(my
translation). In that matter the plaintiff, however, had done nothing
to pursue his claim for almost a decade. What is also
important is to
note however, is that Kruger J who had delivered that judgment, had
subsequently granted leave to appeal on 23
October 2014 in
Jakobo
v Grimbeeck
[2013] JOL 32790
(FB)
(380/2013) inter alia on the basis that the plaintiff might have been
excused for his inactivity due to the erroneous impression
created by
the defendant that “everything was in order”, obviating
the need for plaintiff to act. The judgment, at
best, indicates that
the consideration or determination of the inception of the period of
prescription is fact-, and therefore,
case-specific.
5.5
In this regard, in
Amlers
Precedents of Pleadings
(op cit) the
following is proclaimed (on which quotation the sixth defendant also
relies), namely that “…
as
a general rule, prescription begins to run as soon as the debt is due
unless the debt is the result of a continuing wrong …
this
means that the debt must be immediately claimable by the creditor in
legal proceedings and that the debtor must be under an
obligation to
perform
”
. See also:
Benson
v Walters
1984 (1) SA 73
(A) at 82 and
Uitenhage Municipality v Molly
[1997] ZASCA 112
;
1998 (2) SA 735
(SCA). In the present case, the
plaintiff would not have been able to institute legal proceedings
prior to him delivering an account
to his clients and the expiry of a
period of 14 days thereafter. Conversely, the clients would not have
been under an obligation
“to perform”, i.e. to make
payment until such time as an account had been rendered.
5.6
In this regard counsel for the plaintiff, with
reference to
Shraga v Chalk
1994 (3) SA 145
(NPD) emphasised the distinction
between the notion of when a debt arises and when it becomes due.
This was also considered in
Deloitte
Haskins and Sells Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Bowthorpe Hellerman Deutsch
(Pty) Ltd
[1990] ZASCA 136
;
1991 (1) SA 525
(A) at 532H
and
Cape Town Municipality and another v
Allianze Insurance Co Ltd
1990 (1) SA
311
(C) at 321 B – C, lastmentioned with reference to the
acquisition of knowledge of “
the
entire set of facts which the plaintiff had to prove to succeed
”
.
Counsel also relied on the dictum that “
prescription
does not necessarily [start to] run when the debt arises, but only
when it becomes due
”
made in
Primavera Construction SA v Government,
North West Province
2003 (3) SA 579
(BPD).
5.7
Whilst it might be argued that after performance
of his mandate, the plaintiff should have been able to calculate his
fees and therefore
had or could reasonably have acquired knowledge of
“the complete set of facts” to sustain a cause of action,
the parties
have agreed however, that despite this “set of
facts”, the debt, being the obligation to pay for the
professional services
rendered, would not become due until 14 days
after the rendering of an account. No account, no obligation to pay,
or, to put it
in the words of the
Prescription Act, absent
the
delivery of an account and the expiry of a period of 14 days, the
“debt” would not yet become due. This is also
exactly
what the
Prescription Act, in
section 12
requires: “…
prescription shall commence to run as
soon as the debt is due
”
.
5.8
The sixth defendant’s actual complaint or
basis for its special plea, is that the plaintiff has delayed, not in
instituting
action (which was done within 3 years after the rendering
of accounts as required by
section 10(1)
of the Act read with
section
11(d)
thereof), but in the rendering of his accounts.
5.9
At the risk of inviting criticism for repetition,
I point out that, without pleading that the obligation to render
accounts without
delay was an implied or tacit term of the agreement
between the parties, the sixth defendant simply pleaded, in respect
of each
claim and with reference to the respective dates of
completion of the mandate that “
the
plaintiff’s claim[s] fell due on [the date of completion of the
mandates] alternatively within a reasonable period thereafter,
such
reasonable period being not more than 30 days
”
.
In the absence of such a term, there was no contractual obligation on
the plaintiff to render an account at a time other than
at his
convenience.
5.10
The converse was however, agreed: the sixth
defendant as the client, could demand interim accounts at such times
or intervals as
he preferred. This is expressly catered for in clause
12 of the “Cost Agreement”. This was the intention of the
parties
and neither the wording of the agreement nor the “background
facts” point to a similar reciprocal obligation on the
plaintiff. The “background facts” are those which a court
is entitled to consider in respect of the issue of prescription
which
are, in this case, the evidence presented by the plaintiff. See
Stockdale v Stockdale
2004
(1) SA 68
(CPD) in this regard. The evidence is that at no stage did
the sixth defendant choose to demand the rendering of accounts.
5.11
On the other hand, it could very well be argued
that it would be manifestly unjust if a plaintiff, or as in this
case, an attorney,
simply fails to render an account by which his
fees would become due and payable for an inordinate period of time
and say, six
years later, suddenly render an account and expect it to
be paid within 14 days. Even if one were then, on a generous and
beneficial
interpretation of the sixth defendant’s special
plea, to consider whether an implied or tacit term to the effect that
an
account should be rendered within a reasonable time after
performance of the mandate, should be read into the “Cost
Agreement”,
then no evidence has been placed before the court
by the sixth defendant as to what that period would be or as to why
30 days would
either in general or in the circumstances of this case,
be a reasonable period.
5.12
On the contrary, the plaintiff has placed evidence
before the court as to why the delay in the rendering of his accounts
was reasonable
in the circumstances:
-
He was aware that the mandates which he had
been called upon to perform under the “Cost Agreement”
were all still aimed
at enabling the clients to establish the estate.
Despite the performance of his mandates, the establishment of the
estate was delayed
by the water use rights issue, which was being
handled by someone else.
-
He stated that the clients had insufficient funds
to pay for professional services until such time as the estate has
been established
and erven could be sold, or that it would be
“inconvenient” for the clients to pay before the proceeds
of such sales
materialised.
-
He had attempted to obtain clarity or negotiate
payment terms or promises by way of providing “concept
statements” or
“ball park figures”.
-
His efforts in ascertaining how and when his fees
would be paid were hampered by apparent disagreements within the
joint venture.
-
He was on numerous occasions requested by his
clients to keep the rendering of his accounts in abeyance (presumably
because once
rendered, the 14 day period to make payment would start
running).
5.13
Even through there may be some gaps in time the
plaintiff’s explanations, the delays in rendering or the
withholding of accounts
appear to have been more to the clients’
benefit than to their prejudice. I am unable to find, on the
uncontroverted evidence
of the plaintiff, firstly that he had been
under an obligation to have rendered his accounts earlier than when
he did or, secondly,
that the time period that had elapsed prior to
his eventually rendering his accounts, has been unreasonable.
[6]
Conclusion
I therefore conclude that the sixth
defendant has not discharged the onus to prove that the plaintiff has
been under an obligation
to render his accounts earlier than he did.
The conclusion is then further that the running of prescription in
respect of the debt
which the plaintiff seeks to enforce in this
action, only commenced 14 days after the date of the rendering of the
accounts, that
is on 12 April 2011. Action was instituted within
three years from this date and accordingly the plaintiffs’
claims have
not become prescribed.
[7]
Costs
Although the special plea has not
succeeded, it was merely a procedural, although substantial, hurdle
in the course of the remainder
of the plaintiff’s race. It has
repeatedly been held that “
in essence the decision [as to
costs] is a matter of fairness to both sides
”. See Van
Loggerenberg
, Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
at D5 –
6 and the numerous cases quoted in footnote 1 on that page. I find it
to be fair that the costs of this hurdle should
be dependent on the
ultimate success in the case. In the exercise of my discretion, I
therefore find that costs should be costs
in the cause.
[8]
Order
1.
The sixth defendant’s special pleas of
prescription are dismissed.
2.
Costs shall be costs in the cause.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 4 April 2022
Judgment
delivered: 14 April 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv J AVenter
Attorney
for the Plaintiff:
E Y Stuart Incorporated, Pretoria
For
the 6
th
Defendant:
Adv A J Schoeman
Attorneys
for the 6
th
Defendant:
Kruse Attorney Inc., Pretoria
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