Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 388South Africa
Vharanani Properties (Pty) Ltd v Member of the Executive Council, Department of Human Settlements, Gauteng Provincial Government (25110/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 388 (1 June 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Vharanani Properties (Pty) Ltd v Member of the Executive Council, Department of Human Settlements, Gauteng Provincial Government (25110/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 388 (1 June 2022)
Vharanani Properties (Pty) Ltd v Member of the Executive Council, Department of Human Settlements, Gauteng Provincial Government (25110/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 388 (1 June 2022)
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sino date 1 June 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 25110/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
Date:
1 June 2022
In
the matter between:
VHARANANI
PROPERTIES (PTY)
LTD
APPLICANT
and
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL,
DEPARTMENT
OF HUMAN SETTLEMENTS,
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant claims payment of amounts
based on two payment certificates. It is not in dispute that the
payment certificates are
liquid documents. The respondent disputes
liability based on three defences – (i) a ‘dispute’
exists on payment
certificate 273 that first has to be adjudicated;
(ii) an ‘issue with tax invoice 528 in relation to payment
certificate
273; and (iii) a plea that payment certificate 295b
relates to interest in the alleged late payment of the amount claimed
in payment
certificate 273.
Common
cause facts
[2]
The applicant (Vharanani) and the
respondent (the Department) concluded a signed written agreement (the
building contract) in terms
whereof the applicant was appointed to
construct low cost housing and rental units in Nellmapius, Extension
22, Heartherly East,
Pretoria. The building contract is regulated by
NEC 3 Engineering and Construction Contract (June 2005 with
amendments) with the
conditions of contract being the core clauses
for main Option B: Priced contract with bill of quantities, dispute
resolution Option
W1.
[3]
In terms of the building contract:
i.The
Department appointed a project manager, K Ntshumaelo - Lekwa
Consulting Engineers (Lekwa);
ii.Vharanani
is entitled to progress payments during the execution of works;
iii.The
project manager is to assess the amount due at each assessment date,
and is to certify a payment within one week of the
assessment date;
iv.The
Department is to make payment of certified amounts within four weeks
of the assessment;
v.
If a certified payment is late, or if the
project manager does not issue a certificate which he should issue,
interest is paid on
the late payment;
vi.Interest
is assessed from the date by which the late payment should have been
made until the date when the late payment is made,
and is included in
the first assessment after the late payment is made;
vii.If
an amount due is corrected in a later certificate either-
·
by the project manager in relation to a
mistake or a compensation event
or
·
following a decision of the Adjudicator or
the tribunal
interest on the
correcting amount is paid. Interest is assessed from the date when
the incorrect amount was certified until the
date when the correcting
amount is certified;
viii.Interest
is calculated on a daily basis at 2% per annum above the prime
lending rate and is compounded annually;
ix.No
change to the contract, unless provided for by the conditions of
contract, has effect unless it has been agreed, confirmed
in writing
and signed by the parties;
x.
The project manager issues his certificates
to the employer and the contractor. The supervisor issues his
certificates to the project
manager and the contractor.
[4]
As the project progressed, the project
manager issued payment certificates at regular intervals.
The
applicant’s case
Payment
certificate 273
[5]
The applicant avers that the project
manager issued payment certificate 273, certifying the amount of R5
232 349.14 as being due
and payable, on 25 July 2018. A copy of the
payment certificate forms part of the annexures to the founding
papers. The Department
was obliged to make payment within 4 weeks of
the assessment, failing which interest would accrue. The Department
failed to make
payment by 22 August 2018, as it was, according to
Vharanani, obliged to do.
[6]
It is apposite to note at this point that
the bundle of documents uploaded by the applicant also reflects that
Vharanani issued
two tax invoices on 25 July 2018. They contain the
same reference ‘CERT273’. The first invoice with number
482 reflects
the amount of R5 232 349.14. The word ‘cancelled’
is, however, written in hand on this invoice. A second tax invoice
with invoice number 528 reflects the amount of R3 915 363.32 as due
and owing.
[7]
On 12 November 2018 the Department made
payment of an amount of R3 915 363.32. On 22 May 2019 Vharanani’s
attorney demanded
payment of the outstanding amount. On 31 May 2019
the Department admitted liability for the amount of R1 316 985.82 but
stated
that a revised reduced invoice and a permission from the
service provider were to be provided before payment could be
effected.
A reduced tax invoice was submitted to the Department, but
no payment was forthcoming. The revised tax invoice dated 30 August
2018 wherein the amount due and owing is reflected as R1 316 985.82,
reflects the reference ‘CERT 295’. On 10 February
2021 a
further demand was made for payment.
[8]
Vharanani claims that it executed the work
in respect of which the progress claim was made. Payment of the
amount of R5 232 349.14
had been certified by the project manager in
accordance with the building contract. It complied with its
obligations in terms of
the building contract and no lawful reason
exists for the Department not to have made payment. In the result,
Vharanani contends
that it is entitled to the following in terms of
the payment certificate 273:
i.Payment
of R 1 316 985,82
ii.Interest
on the said amount from 23 August 2018 to date of payment;
iii.Interest
on the amount of R3 915 363.32 from 23 August 2018 to 12 November
2018 calculated on a daily basis at 2% per annum
above the prime
lending rate and compounded annually in the amount of R105 220.58
Payment
certificate 295b
[9]
On 1 June, alternatively on 3 June 2020,
the project manager issued payment certificate 295b certifying the
amount of R537 862.20
as due and payable by the Department. The
Department was obliged to make payment by 1 July 2020 failing which
interest would accrue.
Despite demand, no response was received from
the Department prior to the filing of the notice of motion. Vharanani
claims that
it is entitled to payment of the said amount of R537
862.70 and interest thereon from 2 July 2020 to date of payment.
The
respondent’s answer
[10]
The Department raised a point in limine. It
avers that the application is premature and that Vharanani was first
supposed to lodge
‘the dispute’ with the adjudicator in
terms of the dispute resolution clause contained in the building
contract.
Payment
certificate 273
[11]
In regard to payment certificate 273, the
Department admits that the payment certificate was signed by the
project manager for R5
232 349.14. The respondent states in the
answering affidavit that it ‘
did
not’
dispute the amount claimed
by the applicant. It is necessary to have regard to paragraph 18 of
the answering affidavit as its stands:
‘
The
department did not dispute the amount claimed by the applicant. The
respondent contend that the amount claimed by the applicant
is not
payable to the applicant seeks that this application be dismissed
with costs.’ (
sic.)
[12]
I pause to state that it was not submitted
during argument that the content of paragraph 18 of the answering
affidavit contains
a typographical error. The respondent, however,
attempts to provide an explanation for why only the amount of R3 915
363.32 was
paid. A contextual reading of the answering affidavit
indicates that the respondent disputes that the amount of R5 232
349.14 was
due and owing, albeit that the dispute resolution process
provided for in agreement, was not followed. It is logical that where
parties can solve a dispute amicably it is not necessary to refer a
dispute to the Adjudicator.
[13]
It is stated in the answering affidavit
that although the amount of R5 232 349.14 was certified as due and
payable in terms of payment
certificate 273, the amount was disputed
by the respondent and this dispute was communicated to the applicant.
The amount was then,
so it is stated, by agreement reduced to an
amount of R3 915 363.32. The project manager issued a revised payment
certificate on
8 October 2018. Vharanani also submitted a tax invoice
for payment of the lesser amount, although this invoice predates
October
2018 as it is dated 25 July 2018. The amount was paid to the
applicant on 12 November 2018. The respondent avers that this does
not constitute a late payment since the correct payment certificate
was only submitted on 8 October 2018. I pause to mention that
no
amended payment certificate was attached to the answering affidavit.
The document that was attached is evidently not a payment
certificate
and seems to be an internal document, although the letter sent by the
project manager dated 8 October 2018 reflecting
that as far as
payment certificate 273 is concerned the amount of R3 915 363.33 is
certified, was belatedly filed.
[14]
The respondent admits that it is liable for
payment of the amount of R1 316 985.82 to Vharanani. However, the
respondent submits
a new payment certificate had to be issued
certifying the amount as due and payable, and a new invoice ‘based
on PC 273 for
the amount’ had to be submitted. The answering
affidavit is not clear as to whether the Department only wanted a new
tax
invoice to be submitted, or a new payment certificate. The
respondent claims that Vharanani never formally submitted an invoice
for the outstanding balance on payment certificate 273. The
respondent asserts that as an organ of state its finances are
governed
in terms of the Public Finance Management Act
Payment
certificate 295b
[15]
The Department disputes that it is liable
to pay the amount reflected in payment certificate 295b on the basis
that the amount claimed
is the interest in the alleged late payment
of the amount claimed in payment certificate 273.
The
applicant’s reply
[16]
Vharanani denies in reply that any dispute
exists which is capable of being referred to adjudication because the
matter before the
court does not relate to any of the types of
disputes identified in the Adjudication Table of the agreement.
Vharanani’s
cause of action is premised upon its entitlement to
be paid outstanding monies arising from the Department’s
failure to honour
its payment obligations in terms of the contract.
Vharanani explains that the Department’s payment obligation
does not arise
from a tax invoice or cease due to lack of a tax
invoice, but arises from a payment certificate issued by the project
manager.
[17]
Vharanani denies any agreement to claim a
reduced price in terms of payment certificate 273. It also submits
that annexures MME1
and MME2 do not reflect payment certificates at
all and points out that no document dated 8 October 2018, as referred
to in the
answering affidavit, is attached to the answering
affidavit. I pause to note that the respondent sought permission to
belatedly
upload a document that ought to have formed part of the
answering affidavit. I ruled that the document may be uploaded,
accepting
it provisionally, for me to peruse it before I make a
ruling on its admissibility. The respondent’s attorney of
record failed
to upload this document and it was only uploaded on 23
May 2022 by the applicant’s attorneys of record after an
enquiry from
my office.
[18]
After perusing the letter I am admitting it
into evidence. The letter was referred to in the answering affidavit
but not attached
to the answering affidavit. Counsel for the
applicant’s had sight of the letter prior to it being handed up
to the court.
He contends that it should not be accepted into
evidence because Vharanani did not have an opportunity to respond
thereto. Vharanani,
however, did not request that it wanted time to
respond to the letter in the event that it is accepted into evidence.
Although
principles of procedure are necessary to ensure that a
hearing is fair, court proceedings are not constituting a chess game
where
one party inevitably gains from another’s mistake. The
applicant’s attorneys of record likewise, inadvertently,
neglegted
to upload one page of the building contract.
[19]
As far as payment certificate 295b is
concerned, Vharanani contends that the Department erroneously avers
that the amount claimed
in payment certificate 295b is the ‘interest
in the alleged payment of the amount claimed in PC 273 submitted in
2018’.
Payment certificate 295b relates to continuous late
payments made by the Department on ‘almost a monthly basis
ranging from
payment certificate 25 to payment certificate 239 as is
evident from the letter dated 18 June 2019 referred to by the project
manager
in annexure ‘DM9’ to the founding affidavit.
Discussion
[20]
Construction and building contracts are
contracts that are used within the complex construction and building
environment. These
contracts are generally based on standard form
contracts. Written agreements are concluded specifically to stipulate
and regulate
the obligations of the parties thereto. It provides
certainty as to what parties can expect from each other.
[21]
The
contract concluded between the parties provides a specific process
and timeframe within which payment was to be effected. The
project
manager has to assess the amount due at an assessment date.
Assessments should be done at regular intervals as provided
for in
the contract. In assessing the amount due, the project manager has to
consider applications for payment by Vharanani that
was submitted on
or before the assessment date. The contract provides for the
correction of any wrong assessment but it is important
to note that
while assessments occur at intervals,
[1]
the project manager must certify payments within one week of each
assessment date, and certified payments are to be made within
four
weeks of the assessment date. Wrongly assessed amounts are corrected
in later payment certificates. Where late payments are
made interest
is paid on the correcting amounts but is assessed from the date when
the incorrect amount was certified until the
date when the correcting
amount is certified, and is included in the assessment which includes
the correcting amount.
(i)
Dispute resolution
[22]
NEC 3 provides for the resolution of
disputes. It is stated in clause W1.1 that a dispute arising under or
in connection with this
contract is referred to and decided by the
Adjudicator. W1.3 states that disputes are notified and referred to
the Adjudicator
in accordance with the Adjudication table. The
Adjudication Table provides the timeline within which an identified
party may refer
a specific type of dispute to the Adjudicator. For
example:
(Find
table in PDF)
[23]
Provision is made in the Adjudication Table
for a dispute about “any other matter” that is not
specifically identified
in the Table, by “either party”
between two and four weeks after notification of the dispute to the
other Party and
the Project Manager.
[24]
The Department alleges that a dispute
existed that should have been referred to the Adjudicator. The issue
raised regarding disputes
is dual in nature. The first nuance thereof
is whether a dispute existed that Vharanani had to refer to the
Adjudicator. A reading
of the papers does not point to the existence
of a dispute that had to be adjudicated by the Adjudicator. The facts
point to certified
payment certificates that were not paid by the
Department in terms of the contract. Although the Department
frequently refers to
the existence of numerous disputes that caused
it to question payment certificates and to withhold payment because
of the disputes,
the averments are made in general and without any
substantiation. If any such disputes did exist, those are the kind of
disputes
that had to be referred for adjudication by the Department
if the parties could not resolve it
inter
partes
. The applicant did not err in
approaching the High Court for the relief it seeks in this
application.
(ii)
Payment certificate 273
[25]
Having said that, on a reading of the
papers as a whole, it is evident that the first certification under
payment certificate 273
in the amount of R5 232 349.14 was not
followed through despite payment certificate 273 being a liquid
document. The documents
filed by Vharanani indicates that two tax
invoices with different invoice numbers were issued on the same date,
both referencing
payment certificate 273. The first, reflecting the
amount due and owed as R5 232 349.14 contains the word ‘cancelled’
wrote on it, and the second was issued for the amount of R3 915
363.32. These documents provide credence to the respondent’s
version that the respondent disputed the amount of R5 232 349.14
reflected in payment certificate 273 and that the parties
subsequently
agreed that an amount of R3 915 363.32 was due and
payable under the payment certificate. An additional factor that
substantiates
this finding is the fact that the invoice dated 30
August 2018 wherein the amount of R1 316 985.82, that is the balance
of the
initial amount of R5 232 349.14, is indicated as due and
payable, contains a reference to a different payment certificate,
namely
‘CERT 295’.
[26]
Despite the fact that no amended
payment certificate 273 is before the court, and in the absence of a
further written agreement
between the parties, the documents filed
speaks for itself. On my interpretation of the facts, Vharanani is,
however still entitled
to claim interest on the late payment of the
amount of R3 915 363.32 calculated from the date of certification of
the incorrect
amount, the date being 25 July 2018 to the date when
the correcting amount was certified. The project manager provided the
respondent
with an amended payment certificate on 8 October 2018.
Vharanani is thus, in terms of clause 51.3 of the agreement entitled
to
interest on the amount of R3 915 363.32 calculated from 25 July
2018 to 8 October 2018. The amount was paid within the prescribed
four weeks after receipt of the project manager’s letter dated
8 October 2018 which refers to a payment certificate annexed
to it,
and in that sense the payment on 12 November 2018 cannot be regarded
as late payment. The respondent is wrong in alleging
that the
obligation to pay the amount of R3 915 363.32 first arose on 8
October 2018. Such a view does not discount clause 51.3
of the
agreement.
[27]
The respondent admits the obligation to pay
the amount of R1 316 985.82. Although Vharanani contends in the
founding affidavit that
the obligation to pay arose from payment
certificate 273, this contention is not substantiated by the fact
that Vharanani issued
a tax invoice for this amount under the
reference of a different payment certificate, namely ‘Cert
295’. Neither of
the parties provided the court with payment
certificate 295. A dispute of fact exists as to when this amount
became due and payable.
An applicant must make out its case on the
papers filed and the uncertainty that exists regarding the time at
which the amount
of R1 316 985.82 became due and payable, renders it
impossible for a court on motion proceedings to determine the date
from which
interest started to accrue.
[28]
The papers filed of record reflect that the
project manager amended payment certificate 273 instead of addressing
any errors or
disputes in a subsequent payment certificate as the
contracts prescribes. In a situation, where an applicant’s
papers provide
substantiation for the respondent’s version that
a dispute arose and that the parties agreed, albeit not in writing,
that
the amount reflected in the payment certificate (payment
certificate 273) be amended, the applicant cannot rely on the terms
of
the contract its own conduct contradicts. This issue, can be
separated from the remainder of the issues that can be determined on
motion.
(iii)
Payment certificate 295b
[29]
As for the amount claimed in terms of
payment certificate 295b, the respondent avers that the amount
claimed represents the interest
owed for late payment in terms of the
original payment certificate 273. Vharanani replies and submits that
this submission is not
correct and that it refers to interest on late
payments of which the respondent was already alluded to in
correspondence dated
22 January 2018. This date predates the original
payment certificate 273. A proper case is made out in this regard.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The respondent is ordered to make payment
to the applicant of the following amounts:
1.1.
R1, 316 985.82 (One million three hundred
and sixteen thousand nine hundred and eighty-five rand and eighty-two
cents);
1.2.
The claim for interest on the aforesaid
amount is separated from the remainder of the issues and referred to
oral evidence as provided
for in paragraph 2 below;
1.3.
R 537 862.70 (Five hundred and thirty-seven
thousand eight hundred and sixty-two rand and seventy cents);
1.4.
Interest on the amount of R537 862.70 is
calculated on a daily basis at 2% per annum above the prime lending
rate and compounded
annually from 2 July 2020 to date of payment;
1.5.
Interest on the amount of R3 915 363.32 is
calculated on a daily basis at 2% per annum above the prime lending
rate and compounded
annually as from 25 July 2018 to 8 October 2018.
2.
The issue of the claim for the payment of
interest on the amount of R1, 316 985.82 (One million three hundred
and sixteen thousand
nine hundred and eighty-five rand and eighty-two
cents) is referred to oral evidence before Van der Schyff J at a date
and time
arranged with her Registrar, unless the parties settle the
issue
inter partes
.
2.1.
The evidence shall be that of any witness
whom the parties may elect to call, subject to what is provided in
2.1. 2 – 2.1.5
below;
2.1.1.
The applicant is to serve on the respondent
at least fourteen days before the date arranged for the hearing a
statement wherein
the evidence to be given in chief by the intended
witnesses is set out;
2.1.2.
The respondent is to serve on the applicant
at least ten days before the hearing a statement wherein the evidence
to be given in
chief by the intended witnesses is set out;
2.1.3.
The court, at the hearing, may permit any
person to be called despite the fact that no statement has been
served in respect of his
or her evidence;
2.1.4.
Either party may subpoena any person to
give evidence at the hearing, whether such person has consented to
furnish a statement or
not;
2.1.5.
No party shall be obliged to call any
witness even though such witness was subpoenaed;
2.2.
Within 10 days of the date in this order,
each of the parties shall make discovery on oath of all documents
relating to the issue
referred to paragraph 2 above, which are or
have been at any time in the possession or under the control of such
party;
2.3.
Such discovery shall be made in accordance
with rule 35 and the provisions of that rule with regard to the
inspection and production
of documents discovered shall be operative;
2.4.
The issue of costs incurred as a result of
the referral of the issue to oral evidence shall be determined after
the hearing of oral
evidence.
3.
The respondent is to pay the costs incurred
to date, inclusive of the costs of senior counsel where so employed.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. As a
courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv. L.J. van
Tonder SC
Instructed
by:
Tiefenthaler Attorneys Inc.
For
the respondent:
Adv. T. C. Lithole
Instructed
by:
State Attorney
Date
of the hearing:
16 May 2022
Date
of judgment:
1 June 2022
[1]
Clause 50.1 provides- ‘The Project Manager assesses the amount
due at each assessment date. The first assessment date is
decided by
the Project Manager to suite the procedures of the Parties and is
not later than the assessment interval after the
starting date.
Later assessment dates occur:
·
At the end of each assessment interval until four weeks after the
Supervisor
issues the Defects Certificate and
·
At Completion of the whole of the works.’
The
assessment interval is stipulated in the Contract date as ‘
between 12:00 hours on the 20
th
day of each successive
month’.
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