Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 613South Africa
Casper Jacobs Konstruksie CC v Minister of Police (28360/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 613 (24 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 August 2022
Judgment
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## Casper Jacobs Konstruksie CC v Minister of Police (28360/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 613 (24 August 2022)
Casper Jacobs Konstruksie CC v Minister of Police (28360/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 613 (24 August 2022)
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sino date 24 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 28360/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
24
August 2022
In
the matter between:
CASPER
JACOBS KONSTRUKSIE
CC
Plaintiff
and
# THE MINISTER OF
POLICEDefendant
THE MINISTER OF
POLICE
Defendant
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
# DE VOS AJ
DE VOS AJ
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The
plaintiff seeks to enforce a contractual right contained in a
construction agreement.
[1]
The agreement provides that the plaintiff must construct a police
station for the defendant. The plaintiff is entitled,
if it
foresees a delay in the completion of the construction, to claim a
revision of the completion date.
[2]
The project required the erection of a water tank. The defendant was
to
nominate a subcontractor to erect the water tank. The defendant
failed to nominate a subcontractor which delayed the completion
of
the station.
[3]
The plaintiff seeks to revise the completion date as a result of the
delay
caused by the erection of the water tank. The result of being
granted a revision is a monetary payment for each day the
finalisation
was delayed. The mischief behind this monetary
claim is to compensate the constructor from losing money as a result
of a
delay caused by the defendant. If the defendant delays the
construction, the plaintiff loses monies spent on renting equipment,
paying salaries or being unable to take on other work.
[4]
The agreement sets outs the methodology to be used to calculate the
monies
to be paid to the plaintiff. The methodology will be
addressed below. When the methodology is applied, the plaintiff
would be entitled to R 14 784,79 for every day that the contract is
revised or extended.
[5]
The defendant had a similar contractual right, for every day the
project
is delayed as a result of the fault of the plaintiff, the
defendant would be able to claim R 25 000. The monetary claim
the
plaintiff seeks to enforce in this case is the corollary of the
defendant's late completion penalty fee.
[6]
The right to revise the completion date is conditional on the
contractor
providing the defendant with notice of the possible delay
within 20 days of when the contractor "became aware or ought
reasonably
to have become aware" of the potential delay. This
will be referred to as the "notice condition".
[7]
It is the notice condition which is the cause of the dispute between
the
parties. The parties agree that the plaintiff provided
notice of the potential delay, but they disagree when the 20-days
started. The plaintiff says it became aware of the potential
delay on 2 September 2015 and provided notice within 20 working
days
on 30 September 2015. The defendant contends that the plaintiff ought
to have become reasonably aware of the potential delay
much sooner.
The defendant claims the plaintiff ought to have been aware on 9
December 2014 and ought to have given notice within
20 days.
[8]
If the plaintiff is correct, that it could only have become aware of
the
delay on 2 September 2015, then it has complied with the notice
condition. The plaintiff would then be entitled to a revision of
the
completion date and to payment of just over R 14 000 a day for 322
days' delay which amounts to R 4 760 700.79.
[9]
If the defendant is correct, then the plaintiff did not comply with
the
notice condition, is not entitled to a revision of the contract
date and does not get paid the monetary compensation.
[10]
The parties agree on the clauses of the contract, their
interpretation and impact.
The core issue in this case is when
the plaintiff became aware (or ought to have become aware) of the
potential delay. The
case therefore turns on the facts.
# FACTS
FACTS
The
contract
[11]
The defendant advertised bid number 19/1/9/36 TB (14) for the
construction of a new police
station in Mareetsane in North West. The
bid was awarded to the plaintiff. On 17 September 2014 the parties
entered into a written
contract for the construction of the new
police station for an amount of R 31 120 000.
[12]
The terms of the agreement are not in dispute. The plaintiff
would commence construction
a day after being given possession of the
site and was to complete construction within 8 months. If the
plaintiff failed
to finalise the construction within this period, the
plaintiff would pay penalties of R 25 000 per day.
[13]
The plaintiff can request a revision date for the completion. If such
a revision is approved
by the defendant it will adjust the contract
value with just over R 14 000 a day. The circumstances under
which the plaintiff
can request a revision include the defendants
failure to issue or the late issue of a contract instruction
following a request
from the plaintiff and a direct contractor ie a
party appointed directly by the defendant (not the plaintiff) to do
specialist
work on-site prior to practical completion. If such
a circumstance occurs, and this is the clause which is in play in
this
matter -
"Should such a
circumstance occur which could, in the opinion of the plaintiff,
cause a delay to practical completion the plaintiff
shall give the
employer a reasonable and timeous notice of such a circumstance, take
any reasonable practical steps to avoid or
reduce the delay, and
within 20 (twenty) working days from the date upon which the
plaintiff became aware or ought reasonably to
have become aware of
the potential delay notify the employer of his intention to submit a
claim for a revision of the date for
practical completion or any
previous revision thereof resulting from such delay, failing which
the employer shall not consider
such claim.
[2]
[14]
The approval of a claim of revision results in a payment of just over
R 14 000 per day
to the plaintiff.
The
construction
[15]
The
commencement date of the contract was 12 November 2014 and the date
for practical completion 13 July 2015
.
The
defendant granted seven requests by the plaintiff for the revision of
the date for practical completion.
[3]
However, it is the plaintiff's claim for extension based on the water
tank which caused the hiccup in this matter.
[16]
The erection of the water tank and stand, the lightning protection,
the signage, the fire
detection and the landscaping was to be
undertaken by a subcontractor nominated by the defendant. This
scope of the work
will be referred to as the "erection of the
water tank". The erection of the water tank was not work
which was
to be done by the plaintiff. However, if the subcontractor
failed to erect the water tank in time, the plaintiff would not be
able
to complete its work in time.
[17]
The purpose of the water tank is to provide water to the station.
It is only after
the water tank had been erected that the plaintiff
would be in a position to conduct the necessary tests to ensure that
the police
station's pipes that provides water and deals with
sanitation was functional. From a safety perspective the
erection of the
water tank had to be completed to ensure that the
station would be safe in the event of a fire. In short, the
plaintiff could
not obtain the necessary completion certification
without the erection of the water tank.
[18]
The first site meeting was on 11 November 2014. The minutes of
this meeting indicates
that the defendant "must enter into a
sub-contract between main and subcontractors". The minutes
of the second
site meeting of 9 December 2014 show that the plaintiff
started asking information about the water tank right off the bat.
The minutes indicate that the plaintiff "inquired about drawings
for the water and septic tanks, since it was not part of
the drawings
handed over". The drawings was to be sourced from the
defendant and the task was allocated to specific
officials of the
defendant. Despite the erection of the water tank being the
function of a subcontractor (to be nominated
by the defendant) as
early as the second site meeting, the plaintiff requested information
regarding the water tank.
[19]
The 3 March 2015 minutes indicate that the defendant's consulting
firm is busy with the
design of the water tank stand. The "drawings
should be ready to be issued at the next site visit".
Again on 5
May 2015 there is a recording in the site meeting minute
that the architect inquired about the drawings for the erection of
the
water tank. Again the obligation to provide this fell to
the defendant.
[20]
On 7 July 2015 again there is a request for the submission of the
documentation regarding
the erection of the water tank "for
tender purposes". The defendant required this
documentation in order to obtain
a nominated subcontractor.
[21]
Throughout, the minutes record, the defendant was to nominate the
subcontractor to erect
the water tank.
[22]
On 1 September 2015 the minutes indicate that "the appointment
of a nominated subcontractor
is awaited". The minute
indicates that "the architect confirmed that he received
notification of possible delay
due to a lack of correct information
regarding roads, paving and storm water. The architect is appointed
by the defendant.
[23]
It was at this stage, after the site meeting of 1 September 2015 the
plaintiff became aware
that there may be a possible delay. Up and
until this point, the plaintiff was awaiting the appointment of a
nominated subcontractor
to erect the water tank.
[24]
On 30 September 2015 the plaintiff lodged a notification of a
possible delay as a result
of the defendants' failure to appoint a
nominated subcontractor for the erection of the water tank. The
plaintiff foresaw
the possibility that a delay on the part of the
defendant to appoint the said nominated subcontractors could cause a
possible delay
in future.
[25]
The defendant did not respond. The defendant did not provide
the plaintiff with instructions
for the appointment of a nominated
subcontractor for the erection of the water tank. On 29 October
2015 the plaintiff submitted
a bid to tender for the construction of
the water tank and stand.
[26]
On 24 June 2016 the plaintiff notified the principal agent again of
the said delay.
[27]
Subsequently, the defendant awarded the tender to the plaintiff.
However, the defendant's
delay had stalled construction for more than
a year. It was only on 2 November 2016 that the defendant
instructed the plaintiff
to erect the water tank. The plaintiff
immediately jumped into action and on the same day, 2 November 2016
it placed the
necessary orders for the erection of the water tank.
However, due to the annual builders recess, the completion of the
water
tank and stand was delayed from 2 November 2016 until 9 January
2017.
[28]
The manufacturing of the water tank and stand commenced in January
2017 and was delivered
on 8 February 2017. The erection and lightning
protection of the tank stand was completed on 15 March 2017,
whereafter the plaintiff
was in a position to install the pressure
pump and start testing all plumbing and fire installations. The
upshot of this is that
the buildings and all installations were 100%
complete and ready in November 2015 for practical completion, but it
could not be
achieved due to the outstanding nominated
subcontractor’s work.
The
claim
[29]
On 19 April
2017 the plaintiff was in a position to arrange for an inspection and
approval of the fire installation. Consequently,
19 April 2017
was the date of practical completion. The certificate of practical
and works completion was issued on 20 April 2017.
On 24 April 2017
the plaintiff submitted its official claim for the extension of time
for a period of 322 days.
[4]
The
plaintiff could only compile its claim once the work affected by the
delay was completed in order to capture the extent of
the delay and
it was only on 19 April 2017 that the plaintiff was aware of the full
extent of the delay. The official claim
by the plaintiff dated
24 April 2017 was received by the defendant within 60 working days of
19 April 2017.
[30]
During or about June 2018 the defendant rejected the plaintiff’s
claim for a revision
of the date of practical completion.
The
defence
[31]
The defendant’s only defence was that the plaintiff was not
entitled to a revision
of the date of practical completion. The
defendant's plea provides -
"6. The defendant
pleads that the plaintiff should reasonably have become aware at the
second site meeting on 9 December 2014
that the date of practical
completion would become delayed. (Plea par 6)
7. Had the plaintiff
acted diligently and reasonably, the plaintiff should have notified
the defendant within 20 working days from
9 December 2014 of its
intention to request a revision of the date of practical completion."
[32]
The defence is that the plaintiff did not notify the defendant in
time of the delay. The
day on which the plaintiff ought to become
aware was on 9 December 2014. The defendant has hemmed itself
into this date of
9 December 2014, in its pleadings.
The
evidence led at trial
[33]
Two witnesses testified. The first was Mr Jacobs from the plaintiff.
The second was Col
N'Khomazi for the defendant.
[34]
Mr Jacobs testified that 9 December 2014 was the second site
meeting. The constructions
was in its infancy. He
testified that it was in the beginning of the project and the
plaintiff was busy with mass earthworks
and construction of the
platforms on which the buildings had to be erected. At that stage, no
information regarding the water tank
and stand was available to the
plaintiff. The only information he had was that a PC amount for the
water tank and stand of R65
000 (Item 8 page 22 in the Bill of
Quantities) was allowed. He could not have, at the site meeting of 9
December 2014, foreseen
a delay in the appointment of a nominated
subcontractor. It was too early in the project and there was no basis
for him to assume
that the defendant would not nominate a contractor
in time.
[35]
Mr Jacobs further testified that from the second site meeting the
plaintiff regularly asked
for information regarding the tank and
stand. This is clear from the minutes of the site and technical
meetings.
[36]
Mr Jacobs testified that he regularly requested information relating
to the erection of
the water tank. He had no basis to
anticipate or foretell that the defendant would not appoint a
subcontractor in time.
[37]
Mr Jacobs further testified that even if a nominated subcontractor
had been appointed as
late as the beginning of September 2015 the
plaintiff would still have been able to complete its work in time.
In other words,
there would have been no need to extend the
contract had the defendant responded to Mr Jacob's notification of
the potential delay.
[38]
The defendant cross-examined Mr Jacobs on the conclusion that he
ought to have foreseen
the delay at an earlier stage. However,
Mr Jacobs was not provided with any factual basis on which he ought
to have been
aware at an earlier stage. Mr Jacobs repeatedly
denied the conclusion being presented to him that he ought to have
known
at an earlier stage. Vitally, during cross-examination no
positive version or basis for the 9 December 2014 date was provided
by the defendant.
[39]
The defendant called one witness, ie Col J N’Khomazi. Col
N'Khomzai is currently
the Chief Quantitity Surveyor for SAPS.
This was not a position he held at the relevant time. Col
N’Khomazi did
not attend any of the site or technical meetings
and was only involved in making recommendations to the Bid
Adjudication Committee
of the defendant.
[40]
Centrally, Col N'Khomazi testified that he had no factual basis upon
which he could positively
state that the plaintiff should reasonable
have foreseen a delay on 9 December 2014.
[41]
Col N'Komazi's evidence was that the plaintiff was given the scope of
work and ought to
have, based on the scope, been able to know from
the outset that the project would not be completed on time.
When asked how
the plaintiff should have known the defendant would
not appoint a subcontractor in time Col N'Khomazi 's evidence is that
the plaintiff
ought to have known that from the outset.
[42]
Col N'Khomazi was asked whether there was any indication, at the
meeting of 9 December
2015 that the defendant would not appoint the
subcontractor. Col N'Khomazi conceded that there was no such
indication as
at 9 December 2015. Instead, it was Mr
N'Khomazi's evidence that the plaintiff "knew fully well what we
had to do"
as soon as he had received the scope of work and as
the construction of the water tank was not a new issue, Mr Jacobs
could have
known from the start.
[43]
The cross-examination of Col N'Khomazi is instructive:
Rossouw SC:
Did Mr Jacobs know that the SAPS would not appoint a contractor in
time?
Col N'Khomazi:
He knew what it was necessary to complete the contract.
...
Rossouw SC:
At 9 December 2014, there is not one iota of a suggestion that the
defendant would not nominate the subcontractor?
Col N'Khomazi:
Yes
[44]
Col N'Khomazi provided no factual basis to dispute the plaintiff's
version and repeatedly
stated that the plaintiff ought to have known
when he signed the agreement that the project would not be completed
on time.
No factual basis for this conclusion was provided.
CONSIDERATION
[45]
It is not disputed that the delay was mainly caused by the delay of
the erection of the
water, which was critical to complete
construction, because the remaining work could only be executed after
completion of the water
tank. It is also common cause that this delay
was the result of the defendant's failure to timeously nominate a
subcontractor.
The question then is when should the plaintiff
have become aware of the consequent delay caused by the failure to
nominate the
subcontractor.
[46]
The plaintiff's evidence was that it could not have known earlier
than September 2015.
It certainly could not have known at the
second site meeting when construction was in its infancy. It
was too soon in the
construction project to know that the defendant
would fail to appoint a subcontractor.
[47]
In addition, had the defendant responded to the plaintiff's
notification of a possible
delay in time, the project would have been
completed without the need for an extension.
[48]
The cross-examination of Mr Jacobs consisted of repeating the
conclusion that he ought
to have known by December 2014 without
providing any basis for this stance. Mr Jacobs evidence stands
substantially uncontested.
[49]
The defendant provided no factual or logical basis to state that the
plaintiff ought to
have known of this failure at the second site
meeting of 9 December 2014. Col N'Khomazi was repeatedly given
an opportunity
to provide a factual basis for the defendant's
position. No such factual basis was forthcoming. The
defendants could
point to no fact or even an inference on which it
could be held that the plaintiff ought to have known at the meeting
of 9 December
2014. Rather, the Colonel repeated the subjective
conclusion that the plaintiff ought to have known at the conclusion
of
the contract.
[50]
Not only did Col N'Khomazi's evidence provide no factual basis to
support the defendant's
pleaded case, but in fact his evidence
contradicted the pleaded case. Col N'Khomazi's evidence was
that the plaintiff ought
to have known, not on 9 December 2014, but
in fact when the contract was concluded.
[51]
The plaintiff's evidence was consistent and unchallenged, it became
aware of the potential
delay in September 2015 and provided notice
within 20 working days of the potential delay. Had the
defendant responded to
this timeously - and not waited a year to
nominate a subcontractor - there would have been no delay and no
penalties to be paid.
METHODOLOGY
[52]
The
agreement provides the parties with options on how the plaintiff will
be compensated if the completion date is to be revised.
One option is
that the constractor must prove the actual loss suffered as a result
of the delay. However, the option chosen by
the parties
[5]
in this case, was that the plaintiff would be paid an agreed amount
calculated as a percentage of the preliminaries.
[53]
The method of calculation of the amount to be paid to the plaintiff
is provided in the
agreement. In the Form of Offer and
Acceptance (read with clause 10 of the Preliminary JBCC) the
preliminaries is determined
to have a time value of R 2 365 565.61.
The specific option chosen to calculate the monetary claim provides
that the preliminaries
is to be divided by the days worked. The days
worked must be the actual days contracted to work, ie excluding
holidays, weekends
and national builders' holidays, for the duration
of the contract. The total days worked (in terms of the
contract not in
terms of the extension) over the relevant period is
160 days. The preliminaries (R 2 365 565.61) divided by
the days
to be worked (160) results in an amount of R 14 784.78 which
represents the payment per day for the extension of the contract.
[54]
The completion date is to be extended by 322 days at R 14 784.87 per
day which provides
a total of R 4 760 700.79.
[55]
The defendant did not dispute this methodology.
[56]
The Court asked counsel whether there is anything in the contract or
in the case law that
would permit the court to deviate from the cold
application of this methodology. It was pointed out that not only had
the parties
agreed to this clause, but had in fact chosen it from
several other options available in the pro forma JBCC contract.
COSTS
[57]
The issue of costs must be considered in circumstances where the
defendant's witness did
not provide a defence in line with the
defence's plea and had no knowledge of the relevant events. The
defendant had, from
the outset, no defence and no witness to
corroborate its case.
[58]
It must have been apparent to the defendant that it had no defence
for quite some time,
certainly as early as when the matter was
mediated. Not only did this result in wasted court time, but
the plaintiff had
to reopen its case when the defendant located a
witness only after the close of the plaintiff's case.
[59]
The Court is entitled to indicate its dissatisfaction with the abuse
of public funds to
defend a matter where the defendant fails to
provide a proper defence and where this was apparent to the defendant
prior to the
commencement of the trial.
CONCLUSION
[60]
In the premises, the plaintiff is entitled to claim for an extension
of time in respect
of Claim no 8 of 322 days for the period 9
November 2016 until 19 April 2017, ie the date of practical
completion.
# ORDER
ORDER
[61]
In the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The defendant be ordered to grant the plaintiff an extension of time
in respect
of Claim no 8 of 322 days for the period 9 November 2016
to 19 April 2017 as envisaged in the written agreement entered into
between
the parties on 17 September 2014;
2.
Payment of the amount of R 4 760 700.79 plus VAT;
3.
Interest on the amount of R 4 760 700.79 at the legally prescribed
rate calculated
from the date of service of the summons to the date
of payment;
4.
Costs of suit, including the costs of senior counsel, on an attorney
and client
scale.
I
de Vos
Acting
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:
AB Rossouw SC
Instructed
by: WJ
Coetzer Attorneys
Counsel
for the applicant:
TT Tshivhase
Instructed
by: State
Attorney, Lucky Nkuna
Date
of the hearing: 3
August, 5 August and 19 August 2022
Date
of judgment: 24
August 2022
[1]
The
construction agreement consists of various agreements and clauses
from agreements, that have been incorporated by agreement
to create
an agreement between the parties. In particular, the agreement
consists of clauses contained in the following agreements:
the JBCC
Series 200 Preliminaries; the JBCC Series 200 Principal Building
Agreement Edition 4.1 dated March 2005; the Form and
Offer and
Acceptance dated 4 August 2014. The contract and its clauses
are common cause.
[2]
Principal Building Agreement clause 29.4.
[3]
The
First revised date: 21 August 2015; Second revised date: 24 August
2015; Third revised date: 3 September 2015; Fourth revised
date: 25
September 2015; Fifth revised date; 6 October 2015; Sixth revised
date: 9 October 2015; and Seventh revised date: 5
November 2015.
[4]
In terms of clause 29.6 read with clauses 29.2, 32.12, 29.2.4,
29.6.2 and 29.6.3 of the PBA.
[5]
See
clause 10.2.: Option A of the JBCC Series 200 - Preliminaries
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