Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 464South Africa
Naude and Another v Steyn City Properties (Pty) Ltd and Another (23867/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 464 (22 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
22 June 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Naude and Another v Steyn City Properties (Pty) Ltd and Another (23867/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 464 (22 June 2022)
Naude and Another v Steyn City Properties (Pty) Ltd and Another (23867/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 464 (22 June 2022)
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sino date 22 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number
: 23867/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE:
22 JUNE 2022
In
the matter between:
ETIENNE
JACQUES NAUDE
FIRST APPLICANT
GD
IRONS (PTY)
LTD
SECOND APPLICANT
(In
Business Rescue)
And
STEYN
CITY PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
GAURDRISK
INSURANCE COMPANY LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
In
re: The reconsideration application
STEYN
CITY PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
ETIENNE
JACQUES NAUDE
FIRST RESPONDENT
GD
IRONS (PTY)
LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
(In
Business Rescue)
GUARDRISK
INSURANCE COMPANY LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
In
re: The main application between:
ETIENNE
JACQUES NAUDE
APPLICANT
And
GD
IRONS (PTY)
LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
(In
business Rescue)
GUARDRISK
INSURANCE COMPANY LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
STEYN
CITY PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL JUDGMENT.
KUBUSHI
J
Delivered:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e-mail. The date and
time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 22 June 2022.
[1]
The First and Second Applicants apply herein for leave to appeal to
the Full Court
of this Division alternatively the Supreme Court of
Appeal, against the whole of the judgment and order, including the
cost order
granted by this court on 10 May 2022, under the
abovementioned case number.
[2]
This court directed that the application be determined on the papers
filed on Caselines
without oral hearing as provided for in the
Division’s Consolidated Directives re Court Operations during
the National State
of Disaster as issued by the Judge President.
[3]
Pursuant to a court order granted by Millar J in the urgent court on
28 April 2022
(“the court order”), the first respondent
Steyn City Properties (Pty) Limited, (“Steyn City”),
approached
this court on 5 May 2022, in terms of Uniform Rule 6(12)
(c) for the reconsideration of the court order together with the
discharge
and setting aside of the court order, the dismissal of the
main application and an order of costs on a punitive scale. The court
order,
inter
alia,
prohibited the second respondent,
Guardrisk Insurance Company Limited (“Guardrisk”), from
paying an amount of R60 million
to Steyn City.
[4]
The application emanated from a contract awarded by Steyn City, to
the second applicant,
GD Irons (Pty) Limited [now in business rescue]
(“GD Irons”) for the construction of upmarket high-rise
apartments.
As liability for any debt that may ensue from the
contract against GD Irons in favour of Steyn City, Guardrisk issued a
Construction
Guarantee (“the Guarantee”).
[5]
The grounds of appeal stated in the application for leave to appeal
are dividable
into two main sections, namely, those that relate to
the Guarantee and those that are premised on section 133 of the
Companies
Act 71 of 2008 (“the
Companies Act&rdquo
;).
[6]
The grounds of appeal that relates to the Guarantee are stated as
follows:
6.1
The Honourable Court erred in not giving
any consideration to the contents of the payment certificate, and the
fact that the payment
certificate, on the face of it and in
accordance with the interpretation thereof, authorised payment to the
contractor and not
the employer, and that the payment certificate
could therefore not be relied upon for purposes of payment of the
guarantee.
6.2
The Honourable Court erred in not giving
proper consideration to the fact that the requirements of the
guarantee for payment were
not strictly complied with, as is required
by law to justify payment on the guarantee.
6.3
The Honourable Court erred in not having
found that the guarantee was accessory in nature, and not of such a
nature that it created
principal obligations, and therefore erred in
its conclusion in paragraph [31] of the reasons for the judgment.
[7]
This court has in the reasons provided on 23 May 2022 as to why it
granted the order
it did on 10 May 2022 dealt in depth with the issue
of the Guarantee, as it was raised in the applicants’ papers
that served
before this court. The essence of the court’s
reasoning why it did not consider this argument by the applicants in
their
favour, is clearly stated in paragraphs [31] and [32] of the
reasons as follows:
“
[31]
In addition, from the simple interpretation of the Guarantee it is
understandable that Guardrisk’s liability under
the Guarantee
was principal and not accessory in nature, and therefore, payment
thereunder could, as stipulated in clause 6 of
the Guarantee, not be
refused or delayed by the existence of any dispute between Steyn City
and GD Irons.
[32]
Consequently, even Mr Naude’s argument that they be granted an
indulgence to supplement their papers by filing
the experts reports
in order to clarify the Payment Certificate attached to the written
demand send by Steyn City to Guardrisk,
was found to have no
substance by the court. The responsibility is not that of Mr Naude
and/or GD Irons to query the Payment Certificate,
only Guardrisk as
the guarantor, can do so.”
[8]
In the heads of argument, the applicants argue their case for leave
to appeal the
judgment and order granted on the contention that:
“
The
application must be considered against the background of GD Irons
being the construction contractor in terms of a construction
contract, where Steyn City is the employer as the other contracting
party. Guardrisk guaranteed payments to Steyn City, when these
become
payable, on the basis of valid payment certificates issued under the
terms of the construction contract. Guardrisk issued
a guarantee in
the form of a payment guarantee which is directly linked to the
construction contract, in line with the wording
of the guarantee.”
[9]
This contention by the applicants is founded on the averments that
there were various
discrepancies with the Guarantee, for instance, it
is alleged that there was no compliance with the strict wording of
the Guarantee
and the requirements therein were not met in order for
payment to be effected, and that the payment certificate and the
recovery
statement were not sufficient to comply with the
requirements of the Guarantee.
[10]
The further contention by the applicants that the provisions of a
guarantee should be followed
strictly before payment may be made and
becomes due, and that the requirements for payment have, therefore,
to be strictly complied
with, is in this court’s view, valid.
However, as this court has found, it was for Guardrisk to raise the
disputes relating
to the Guarantee, if there were any and if it so
wished, – not the applicants. Conversely, there is no evidence
on record
that Guardrisk raised these issues, it did not even oppose
the reconsideration application.
[11]
As further, correctly, argued by the respondents in the heads of
argument, the Guarantee and
the demand that Steyn City delivered to
Guardrisk in terms thereof, are all matters as between and confined
to Steyn City and Guardrisk.
They have nothing to do with either GD
Irons or Mr Naude (the applicants).
[12]
In regard to the proposition of whether the Guarantee was principal
and not accessory in nature,
the provisions of the Guarantee in
clause 6 thereof, expressly provide that Guardrisk’s liability
under the Guarantee is
principle and not accessory in nature. This
clause of the Guarantee required no interpretation but a simple
reading thereof, and
for this court to have found otherwise, would
have been in direct conflict with that undisputed express clause of
the Guarantee.
[13]
The grounds of appeal that are in respect of the provisions of
section 133
of the
Companies Act, are
stated as follows by the
applicants:
13.1 The Honourable
Court erred in having found that
section 133(1)
of the
Companies Act,
No. 71 of 2008
, did not find application in respect of the payment
that was sought based on the payment certificate, in that payment was
claimed
directly for purposes of satisfying an alleged debt by GD
Irons to Steyn City, a creditor of GD Irons.
13.2 The Honourable
Court erred in not having found that the Guarantee, on a wide and
purposive interpretation of
section 133(2)
of the
Companies Act, was
not a guarantee as meant in [section 133(2) of the Act].
13.3 The Honourable
Court erred in not having properly considered the question whether
enforcement of the payment in terms
of the Guarantee was “enforcement
action” as is meant in
section 133(1)
of the
Companies Act.
[14
]
This court also dealt at length with this issue in its reasons. It
was the court’s finding
that
section 133
of the
Companies Act
does
not, in any way, enter the debate and could never have sustained
a basis for any entitlement to the relief sought by Mr Naude in
the
main application.
[15]
In the heads of argument, the applicants argue that for purposes of
section 133(1)
of the
Companies Act it
must be pointed out that it
appears from the recovery statement that R60 million is apparently
payable, as a result of the alleged
default of the contractor (clause
1.1.5). This means that the contractor, (in business rescue),
incurred a debt of R60 million
towards the employer, Steyn City. The
contention is that it is this debt that has to be paid. Accordingly,
so it was argued, there
could be no doubt that this is a process by
way of which the contractual debt due by GD Irons to Steyn City is
enforced. This most
certainly constitutes a “legal proceeding”
and/or “enforcement action”, as referred to
section
133(1)
of the
Companies Act, so
, it was, further, submitted.
[16]
These submissions by the applicants are responded to correctly, in my
view, by the respondents
in the heads of argument when they contend
that the court acted correctly in not considering the provisions of
section 133
of the
Companies Act because
by doing so, the court would
have ignored the undisputed fact that there were two contractual
worlds at play. The first being the
contractual relationship between
Steyn City and GD Irons in terms of the Main Construction Agreement,
and the second being the
contractual relationship between Steyn City
and Guardrisk in terms of the Guarantee. It further means that this
court would have
found that
section 133(1)
of the
Companies Act
applies
as between Steyn City and Guardrisk, in circumstances where
neither of them are in business rescue, and despite the fact that
Steyn
City was claiming payment in respect of the Certified
Indebtedness from Guardrisk in terms of the Guarantee.
[17]
The application for leave to appeal is regulated in terms of on
section 17 of the Superior Court
Act 10 of 2013 (“the Superior
Court Act”). The application for leave to appeal, in this
instance, is premised on the
primary contention that the foreshadowed
appeal presents with reasonable prospects of success on appeal in
that, so it is contended,
another court (an appeal court) will come
to a different conclusion on the matter. The applicants, as such,
relies on the provisions
of section 17(1)(a)(i) of the Superior Court
Act, which provides that leave to appeal may only be given where the
judge or judges
concerned are of the opinion that the appeal would
have a reasonable prospect of success.
[18]
What the test of reasonable prospects of success postulates is a
dispassionate decision, based
on the facts and the law, that a court
of appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that
of the trial court.
In order to succeed, therefore, the appellant
must convince this court on proper grounds that he has prospects of
success on appeal
and that those prospects are not remote but have a
realistic chance of succeeding. More is required to be established
than that
there is a mere possibility of success, that the case is
arguable on appeal or that the case cannot be categorised as
hopeless.
There must, in other words, be a sound, rational basis for
the conclusion that there are prospects of success on appeal.
[1]
[19]
Section 17(1)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act, further, makes it
clear that leave to appeal
may only be given where the judge
concerned is of the opinion that the appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success. On the
basis of the reasons advanced here above,
this court’s view is that there are no reasonable prospects of
success on appeal
in this matter. The applicants have not convinced
this court on proper grounds that they have prospects of success on
appeal and
that those prospects are not remote but have a realistic
chance of succeeding.
[20]
Consequently, the application for leave to appeal is dismissed with
costs.
E.M
KUBUSHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
FIRST
& SECOND APPLICANTS’ COUNSEL:
ADV
R DU PLESSIS SC
ADV M BOONZAAIER
FIRST
& SECOND APPLICANT’S ATTORNEYS:
WN ATTORNEYS INC
FIRST
RESPONDENT COUNSEL:
ADV JE SMIT
ADV P LOURENS
FIRST
RESPONDENT ATTORNEYS:
WERKSMANS ATTORNEYS
[1]
Smith
v S (475/10)
[2011] ZASCA 15
(15 March 2011) para 7.
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