Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 278South Africa
Ridge Line Roofing CC v Devan 01 (Pty) Ltd and Another (37618/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 278 (29 April 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Summary judgment – Rule 32(2)(b) – explanation by plaintiff why a defence pleaded does not raise an issue for trial.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ridge Line Roofing CC v Devan 01 (Pty) Ltd and Another (37618/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 278 (29 April 2022)
Ridge Line Roofing CC v Devan 01 (Pty) Ltd and Another (37618/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 278 (29 April 2022)
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sino date 29 April 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 37618/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE
:
29 APRIL 2022
In
the matter between:
RIDGE
LINE ROOFING
CC
Plaintiff
and
DEVAN
01 (PTY)
LTD
First
Defendant
BARRY
FAIRLIE
Second
Defendant
Summary: Summary
judgment – Rule 32(2)(b) – explanation by plaintiff why a
defence pleaded does not raise an issue for trial.
Summary
judgment – Rule 32(3)(b) – failure to disclose a
bona
fide
defence – failure to fully disclose the material facts
relied upon therefor.
ORDER
Summary
judgment is granted against the First and Second Defendants, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved,
for payment
to the Plaintiff of the following:
1.
Payment
of the sum of R897 542, 02.
2.
Interest
from 11 August 2021 to date of final payment.
3.
Costs
of suit on the scale as between attorney and client.
J
U D G M E N T
This
matter has been heard in open court and is 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
In this opposed
application for summary judgment the plaintiff has supplied trusses
and rooftiles and has installed roofs at a certain
property
development in Ferndale. The action and the summary judgment
application is for payment of the outstanding balance due
to the
plaintiff. The defendants contend that another company and not the
first defendant is the actual contracting party and furthermore
pleaded that the calculation of the amount claimed is excipiably
vague.
[2]
The plaintiff’s case
2.1
The plaintiff’s pleaded case is that
it had an agreement with the first defendant to supply and install
roof structures and
roof covering (the roofs). This was achieved by
way of a written application for incidental credit, providing inter
alia for the
furnishing of a certificate of balance for the amount/s
due from time to time and including an agreement to pay costs on the
scale
as between attorney and client in respect of any legal
proceedings, which application for credit had been accepted by the
plaintiff.
2.2
The claim against the second defendant (Mr
Fairlie) is based on a written deed of suretyship.
2.3
At the first defendant’s instance and
request, the plaintiff has manufactured, installed and delivered
roofs in respect of
“the Rubix Development” situated at
stand 2122 Ferndale (the property).
2.4
The first defendant had provided the
plaintiff with a snaglist in respect of which the plaintiff has
completed remedial work by
2 July 2021.
2.5
A statement of the first defendant’s
account has been annexed to the particulars of claim, reflecting an
outstanding balance
due as at 5 July 2021 of R897 542,02. The
statement further reflects the particulars of a tax invoice as a
first claim in
the amount of R 1 081 296.14, dated 23
February 2021, a second tax invoice as a second claim in the amount
of R121 793,
41 dated 30 April 2021 and two credit notes of the
same date in the amounts of R 45 622,80 and R9 924,73
respectively
and an interim payment of R 250 000,00 dated 3 May
2021.
[3]
Defendants’ plea
3.1
The defendants pleaded that the written
application for incidental credit facilities was only for a
“once-off” development
known as Farhills Manor on a
property in Sandton.
3.2
The defendants further pleaded that it was
not in fact the first defendant that the plaintiff had contracted
with in respect of
the Rubix development, but that the plaintiff had
“…
entered into a written
agreement with Fericit (Pty) Ltd (Fericit) represented by the first
defendant on 21 January 2021 in terms
whereof the plaintiff would
manufacture for Fericit goods in respect of the Rubix development
”.
It was further alleged that Fericit was the owner of the erf in
Ferndale where the development is situated and that a copy
of the
written agreement is annexed as Annexure BF1 “…
with
its own terms and conditions …
”.
3.3
Based on the aforesaid, the defendants also
pleaded that the plaintiff’s case suffers from a fatal
non-joinder of Fericit.
3.4
The delivery and installation of the good
are not disputed but it was pleaded that this was delivered to
Fericit. The same allegations
of wrong identity is made in respect of
the production of the snaglist.
3.5
The denial of the correct party sued as
first defendant, led the defendants to dispute Mr Fairlie’s
liability as surety.
3.6
In respect of the quantum of the claim, the
defendants pleaded that, should the court find that they are bound by
the incidental
credit agreement and the deed of suretyship
respectively then “
the statement
does not provide sufficient details in respect of how the plaintiff’s
claim is made up, is not descriptive and
provides no particulars in
order for the defendants to properly ascertain how the plaintiff’s
claim is made up
”. Despite no
exception having been taken, the plea itself and counsel for the
defendants in her argument in opposition to
the application for
summary judgment, labelled the plaintiff’s particulars of claim
“vague and embarrassing”.
[4]
The application for summary judgment
4.1
The plaintiff’s application for
summary judgment, which timeously followed on the delivery of the
plea as provided for in
Rule 32(1) (as amended with effect from 1
July 2019) was accompanied by the prescribed supporting affidavit. In
this affidavit,
the plaintiff’s cause of action and the amount
claimed, have been properly verified.
4.2
In terms of the amended Rule 32(2)(b) the
plaintiff is entitled to, in this affidavit, “
explain
briefly why the defence as pleaded does not raise any issues for
trial
”.
4.3
In respect of the issue of a written
contract between the plaintiff and Fericit, not only is this denied
but in relation to the
alleged existence of such a written contract
(as pleaded by the defendants), the plaintiff has, prior to the
application for summary
judgment delivered a notice in terms of Rule
30A pursuant to the defendants’ failure to annex the alleged
written agreement
to their plea. No such annexure nor any written
agreement was produced by the defendants in response hereto.
4.4
In the Rule 30A notice, the defendants were
also requested to comply with Rule 18(6) and to state who they allege
had acted on behalf
of the plaintiff when this alleged written
agreement had been entered into and where this would have taken
place. The defendants
have not responded to this request, rendering
their plea in this regard deficient.
4.5
In “briefly explaining” why
this portion of the defendants’ plea does not raise a triable
issue, the plaintiff
referred to a quotation directed to Mr Fairlie
in respect of the roofing for the development in Ferndale on 13
January 2022. Objecting
to the annexing of this quotation, the
defendants relied on the wording of Rule 32(4). This wording has been
left unamended since
before the time that Rule 32 provided for an
opportunity for a plaintiff to “briefly explain” why a
pleaded defence
raises no issue for trial. Rule 32(4) provides that,
save for the plaintiff’s affidavit provided for in Rule
32(2)(b), “no
evidence may be adduced by the plaintiff”.
4.6
Differing views have been expressed by this
court in respect of the apparent conflict between allowing a
plaintiff to provide an
explanation in respect of a pleaded defence
in terms of Rule 32(2)(b) and limiting the production of evidence by
way of Rule 32(4).
See
ABSA Bank Ltd v
Mashinini NO and Another
(32016/2019;
32014/2019) [2019] ZAGPPHC 978 (22 November 2019) paragraph 3.11 and
ABSA Bank Ltd v Mphahlele NO and Others
(45323/2019; 42121/209) [2020] ZAGPPHC 257 (26 March 2020)
[2020] JOL
47649
(GP) paragraph 33 as also referred to in
T-Systems
(Pty) Lt v BDM Technology Services (Pty) Ltd
(In liquidation) (2019/39986) [2020] ZAGPJHC 7 October 2020.
4.7
In
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Five (Pty) Ltd
2020 (6) SA 624
(WCC), without considering the restrictions
apparently imposed by Rule 32(4) the court found that a plaintiff “
is
now required to engage with the contents of the plea in order to
substantiate its averments that the defence is not bona fide
and has
been raised merely for the purpose of delay …
”
(at 22).
4.8
I need not consider, in this case, whether
the plaintiff has gone too far in having annexed the quotation,
because the defendants
have themselves annexed it to their opposing
affidavit (with which I shall deal shortly hereunder), thereby
obviating any prejudice
and by placing it before the court in any
event, despite the wording of Rule 32(4).
4.9
In explaining briefly why the plea that the
agreement was indeed with the first defendant (and not with Fericit),
the plaintiff
referred to and annexed a written acceptance of the
quotation, dated 18 January 2021. This acceptance refers to the
plaintiff,
its representative by name (Werner Beukes), the quotation
reference number and states that it serves as confirmation of an
order.
Insofar as the mischief to which Rule 32(4) may be directed
might be the presentation of evidence which may lead the summary
judgment
procedure to turn into a “mini trial” as
referred to in
Absa v Mashinini NO
above, or insofar as the mischief might be to prevent prejudice to
the defendants, both those aspects do not feature in this case
as the
annexure has been admitted in the defendants’ subsequent
opposing affidavit. Mr Fairlie however, stated that despite
its
obvious content, he “used the wrong letterhead” and did
not intend to bind the first defendant.
4.10
In respect of the issue whether the written
application for incidental credit by the first defendant was a
“once-off”,
limited to a development in Sandton, at the
hearing of the application, it was pointed out that the application
itself refutes
this by referring to at least two further developments
in North Riding, subsequent to the one in Sandton (the form only
provided
space for three “project names” to be listed).
4.11
In respect of the alleged vagueness of the
quantum calculation, the plaintiff, “briefly explained”
why this defence
is not “genuinely” raised (in the words
used in
Tumileng Trading
at paragraph 21), by referring to the fact that the two claims
referred to in the statement annexed to the particulars to claim,
each consisted of a detailed written exposition of how the claims had
been calculated, referring to amount of work done, units
completed,
extent of material on site and quantities in respect of each. After
having received the second of such claims and expositions,
the first
defendant made payment of R250 000.00. The amounts in these
claims and the payment, save for the two credit notes
in favour of
the first defendant, accord with the statement annexed to the
particulars of claim.
4.12
In response to the plea and the issue of
the calculation of amount, the plaintiff has, in addition to what has
been stated above,
issued a certificate of balance as provided for in
the written incidental credit application and annexed that to the
affidavit
supporting the application for summary judgment. The
certificate could validly have been issued earlier but it did not
form part
of the plaintiff’s cause of action. The issuing and
annexing thereof therefore served to confirm or “prove”
the
plaintiff’s claim rather than to indicate why the pleaded
defence is not good. It might be that in this fashion legitimate
objection could be raised against the annexing or production of the
certificate thereby constituting impermissible evidence in
terms of
Rule 32(4) but, as will be seen in my later analysis, in this case,
nothing turns on this. To all intents and purposes
the certificate
can, insofar as the annexing thereof may breach Rule 32(4), be
ignored.
[5]
The defendant’s resistance to the
summary judgment application:
5.1
In terms of Rule 32(3)(b), should a
defendant choose not to furnish security or to avail himself of
presenting oral evidence with
the leave of the court, but to deliver
an affidavit in opposition to the application for summary judgment,
such a defendant must,
by affidavit “
satisfy
the court … that he has a bona fide defence to the action
”.
5.2
While the earlier cases prior to the
amendment of Rule 32 in 2019 (such as
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1974 (1)
SA 418
(A)) did not expect from a defendant “…
to
formulate his opposition to the claim with the precision that would
be required of a plea
” the
defendant is still, now that a plea has indeed been formulated,
required to fully disclose the nature and grounds of
his defence and
the material facts relied upon therefor “
as
has always been the position
”
(see
Tumileng Trading
above at paragraph 24).
5.3
The first issue of significance, is that
neither the Rule 30A notice nor the call for production of the
written agreement between
the plaintiff and Fericit which the
defendants had pleaded exists, had been responded to.
5.4
The consequence of this is firstly that the
defendants persist with an irregular pleading, which it should not be
allowed to do
but the second, more fundamental consequence is the
unavoidable negative inference that the written agreement as pleaded,
does
indeed not exist.
5.5
The result is that the defendants’
principal plea (and their attendant special plea of non-joinder) does
not disclose a genuine,
and therefore, triable defence.
5.6
The alleged “error” contained
in the letterhead of the acceptance of the plaintiff’s quote,
which is inherently
questionable in the circumstances, must suffer
the same demise. In the absence of a quote directed to Fericit and in
the absence
of the written agreement as pleaded between the plaintiff
and Fericit there is no room to conclude that the acceptance was not,
as it appears on the face thereof, an acceptance by the first
defendant. If Mr Fairlie had intended the court (and the plaintiff)
to believe that his detailed acceptance of the quote was indeed by
Fericit, then one would have expected no less than a correction
of
the acceptance, but also that all other subsequent steps, such as the
acceptance of claims, the interim payment and all the
rest of the
steps until action was instituted, would have been in the name of
Fericit, which it was not.
5.7
The best the defendants could do, was to
refer to a single email message where Fericit featured in the
subject-line (and nowhere
in the body of the email letter) but the
explanation is to be found in the defendants’ own plea, namely
that Fericit is the
landowner. Mr Fairlie had corroborated the
ownership in the opposing affidavit by annexing a single-page extract
from Fericits’
title deed. There is, incidentally no
explanation why the whole title deed is not furnished nor what Mr
Fairlie’s relationship
with Fericit is. The best that he does
is to allege that the bookkeeping is done “in the same office”.
Being coy with
the court about relevant facts in summary judgment
proceedings result only in serious doubt being cast about the
bona
fides
of a defendant or the
“genuineness” of his defence.
5.8
Similarly, where the plea complains of an
alleged vagueness about the actual amount claimed but when the
absence of a real triable
issue in this regard is “explained”
in the plaintiff’s affidavit in terms of Rule 32(2)(b) as set
out in paragraph
4.11 above and the matter is taken no further in the
opposing affidavit, then the consequences are twofold: firstly, it
has then
sufficiently been established that no triable defence had
been raised and, secondly, where it has been demonstrated that the
plea
in this regard is contradicted by facts of which the defendants
must have been aware of prior to the delivery of their plea, then
the
complaint about vagueness was a sham and not raised
bona
fide
.
5.9
The best Mr Fairlie does in an attempt to
resist summary judgment being granted in the amount prayed for, is
thereafter to allege
that the snaglist was not attended to. He
annexes emails which does not fully corroborate this version. At best
they show that
there was no joint final inspection or “walk-through”
but they say nothing of what happened thereafter. Instead, he
attempts to rely on a quotation for remedial work obtained by him in
the name of Fericit for an amount exceeding R 1 million. This
was
dated 30 August 2021 and pre-dates the plea, yet there is no mention
of this in the plea itself nor is any counterclaim based
thereon
delivered with the plea.
5.10
Reliance on this quotation as an alleged
defence should be impermissible. Firstly, the defendants cannot
attempt to raise a defence
of this nature for the first time in their
opposing affidavit. I say “attempt to raise a defence”
because the quotation
of 30 August 2021 is merely referred to in the
affidavit like a balloon floating in the air. It is not raised as an
actual defence
such as a non-fulfillment of a contract or a
non-adimpleti contractus
defence, nor as a
quantum meruit
(a reduction of a contract price) nor, as already stated, a
counterclaim. It is simply referred to. The quotation has also been
obtained on 30 August 2021, yet Mr Fairlie in his affidavit dated 5
November 2021 says nothing about what was done subsequent to
the
obtaining thereof. Were remedial work performed? What did it cost?
Was the quotation accepted or acted on or not? The fact
that no
reliance was placed thereon in the plea delivered thereafter on 17
September 2021 leads one to the conclusion that the
quotation was
nothing more than a proverbial ball tossed in the air. It is a
statement made without the defendants relying thereon
in their plea
which is the trigger-mechanism entitling the plaintiff to apply for
summary judgment.
5.11
This brings me to the second reason why the
defendants should not be entitled to rely on the quotation in their
opposing affidavit
(in the event that such reliance could be elevated
to a defence) and it is this: the structure of Rule 32 after the
amendment thereto
in July 2019 contemplates the following sequence of
events – action is instituted, a defendant not only delivers a
notice
of intention to defend, but delivers an actual plea. The
plaintiff, in applying for summary judgment thereafter, is required
to
not only confirm the cause of action, but to engage with the plea
and to “explain” why it has not disclosed any triable
issue which would justify leave to defend to be granted. After the
plaintiff has delivered its affidavit, then the defendant can
deliver
an affidavit resisting summary judgment. Clearly, should a defendant
be permitted to raise a new defence for the first
time in this
lastmentioned affidavit, without seeking to amend its plea and
granting the plaintiff the opportunity to deal therewith
as
contemplated in Rule 32(2)(b), it would impermissibly prejudice the
plaintiff and circumvent the amendments to Rule 32(1).
5.12
The defendants raised some peripheral
issues such as that the incidental credit agreement not having been
accepted in writing, there
having been no further “orders”,
save for the acceptance letter and that the Rubix development has not
been listed
in the agreement. Taken with the substantial lack of both
merits and
bona fides
in respect of the principal issues already dealt with above as well
as the argumentative rather than factual manner in which the
opposing
affidavit has been formulated, I am satisfied that no real and
bona
fide
defences have been raised in this
regard.
[6]
Conclusion
The conclusion is that the two
principal attempted defences, namely the identity of the contracting
parties and the quantum of the
claim, are not genuine triable
defences. The plaintiff is therefore entitled to summary judgment
against both defendants on the
basis as claimed in its particulars of
claim. This includes costs on the agreed scale as between attorney
and client.
[7]
Order
Summary
judgment is granted against the First and Second Defendants, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved,
for payment
to the Plaintiff of the following:
1.
Payment
of the sum of R897 542, 02.
2.
Interest
from 11 August 2021 to date of final payment.
3.
Costs
of suit on the scale as between attorney and client.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 26 April 2022
Judgment
delivered: 29 April 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
Plaintiff:
Adv S Mulligan
Attorney
for Applicant:
Nixon & Collins Attorneys, Pretoria
For
Defendants:
Adv L Oken
Attorneys
for Defendants: Casper le Roux Inc.,
Johannesburg
c/o BPG Attorney Inc,
Pretoria
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