Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 629South Africa
Famous Brands Management (Pty) Ltd v Fourie and Others (76167/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 629 (25 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 November 2018
Headnotes
the defendants will then be liable to indemnify the plaintiff for any amount that may be awarded against the Plaintiff (clause 13.2 of the particulars of claim)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Famous Brands Management (Pty) Ltd v Fourie and Others (76167/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 629 (25 August 2022)
Famous Brands Management (Pty) Ltd v Fourie and Others (76167/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 629 (25 August 2022)
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sino date 25 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 76167/2018
DELIVERED:
25/08/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES/NO
25
August 2022
In
the matter between:
FAMOUS
BRANDS MANAGEMENT
PLAINTIFF
(PTY)
LTD
and
KENNETH
ASHLEY FOURIE
FIRST
DEFENDANT
MICHELE
JACQUELINE FOURIE
SECOND
DEFENDANT
DAVID
BRADLEY CLARK
THIRD
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
PHAHLANE,
J
[1]
The plaintiff’s cause of action
against the defendants is that of specific performance of a
contractual right to an indemnity.
The first and second defendants
(excipients) raised an exception to the plaintiff’s particulars
of claim on the basis that
same lacks averments which are necessary
to sustain a cause of action and are bad in law. The plaintiff
opposes the exception.
[2]
In order to properly contextualise the
gravamen of the excipient’s grounds, one needs to have a brief
background in order
to appreciate the formulation of the particulars
of claim under attack. On 20 March 2014 the plaintiff and the
defendants concluded
a written Sale of Shares Agreement (“the
agreement”), in terms of which the defendants sold 70% of the
issued shares
in Wakaberry Holdings (Pty) Ltd and 4 E Holdings (Pty)
Ltd (“the companies”) to the plaintiff.
[3]
As part of the agreement, the defendants
indemnified the plaintiff “against all loss, liability, damage
or expense, which
the plaintiff may suffer as a result of, or which
may be attributable to any liability of the companies…..”,
the cause
of which arose on the specified periods as set out in
various clauses of the agreement. There is no dispute between the
parties
regarding the terms of the agreement and the indemnification.
[4]
On 4 December 2017 Atlega Holdings (Pty)
Ltd (“Atlega") – a separate third party, issued
summons under case number
81958/17 against Wakaberry wherein it
claims payment of the amounts of R1 192,214 and R230 000 together
with interest and ancillary
relief. It is not in dispute that after
the exception was delivered on 23 November 2018, the plaintiff served
its notice of intention
to amend the particulars of claim on 30
November 2018 - which has been met with an objection. Nonetheless,
only the exception is
before me.
[5]
The defendant’s grounds of
exception, which I will quote in full, are as follows:
1.
The action instituted under
case number 81958/17 is one in which the Defendant is Wakaberry
Holdings (Pty) Ltd.
2.
In that action:
2.1
The plaintiff (Atlega) claims
payment by Wakaberry Holdings (Pty) Ltd.
2.2
No claim is made against Famous
Brands Management Company (Pty) Ltd (the plaintiff under case number
76167/18)
3.
Notwithstanding that no claim
is made against Famous Brands Management Company (Pty) Ltd in case
number 81958/17, Famous Brands
Management Company (Pty) Ltd
nonetheless pleads in this action that:
3.1
if the claim under case
number 81958/17 is upheld the defendants will then be liable to
indemnify the plaintiff for any amount that
may be awarded against
the Plaintiff (clause 13.2 of the particulars of claim)
3.2
if the claim under case
number 81958/17 is upheld then the defendants in this action will be
liable to make payment to the plaintiff
in this action of whatever
amount may be awarded against the plaintiff (paragraph 14 of
particulars of claim); and
3.3
the plaintiff in this action
accordingly alleges that it is entitled to a declaratory order that,
in the event that the claim under
case number 81958/17 is upheld, the
defendants in this action will then be liable to make payment to the
plaintiff in this action
of whatever amount may be awarded against
the plaintiff (paragraph 16 of the particulars of claim).
4.
Following the allegations in
the particulars of claim under case number 76167/18 the prayer seeks:
4.1
a declaratory order for an
indemnification in respect of the claim allegedly made by the
Plaintiff under case number 81958/17 against
Famous Brands;
4.2
an alternative prayer that is
also dependent on judgment being granted in favour of the Plaintiff
under case number 81958/17 against
Famous Brands
.
5.
As appears from the
particulars of claim under case number 81958/17, there is no claim
made against Famous Brands and accordingly,
that company could not
have any award made against it and nor could the claim under case
number 81958/17 be upheld against it”.
[6]
The general principle in interpreting
pleadings is that pleadings must be read as a whole.
Before dealing with the exception, it is
important to have regard to the provisions of Rule 18(4), which makes
it clear that the
pleader is required to state its case in a clear
and logic manner so that the cause of action can be made out of the
allegations
stated. The Rule provides that:
"
Every
pleading shall contain a clear and concise statement of the material
facts upon which the pleader relies for his claim, defence
or answer
to any pleading, as the case may be, with sufficient particularity to
enable the opposite party to reply thereto."
[7]
By
the nature of exception proceedings, when an exception is raised
against the pleading on the basis that it lacks the averments
necessary to disclose a cause of action, the court must accept the
facts alleged in the particulars of claim as correct and may
not have
regard to any other extraneous facts or documents. It may uphold the
exception to the pleadings only when the excipient
has satisfied the
court that the cause of action or conclusion of law in the pleading
cannot be supported on every interpretation
that can be put on the
facts
[1]
.
[8]
The
approach to an exception that a pleading does not disclose a cause of
action was reiterated by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Vermeulen
v Goose Valley Investments (PTY) Ltd
[2]
that:
“
It
is trite law that an exception that a cause of action is not
disclosed by a pleading, cannot succeed unless it be shown that
ex
facie the allegations made by the plaintiff and any document upon
which the cause of action may be based, the claim is (not
may be) bad
in law”.
[9]
With regards to the first and second
grounds of exception, the plaintiff pleaded in paragraphs 10 and 11
of its particulars of claim
that summons were issued by Atlega
against Wakaberry.
9.1
Mr Wallis for the defendant argued that
since no claim for damages has been instituted against Famous Brands
in the Atlega action,
Wakaberry thus remains a distinct juristic
person from the Plaintiff and accordingly, that company would not
have any awards made
against Famous Brands and further that the
indemnification clause does not provide for such damages.
9.2
Mr van der Merwe on the other hand
submitted on behalf of the plaintiff that, even though the
defendants’ liability under
the indemnity clause is subject to
various conditions, none of these are relevant for purposes of the
exception. He however argued
that, the fact that a claim is made
against Wakaberry in the Atlega action, that does not mean that the
plaintiff will not be exposed
to loss.
9.3
It may very well be that indemnity
conditions are not relevant for purposes of the exception, however,
to sustain a cause of action
under indemnity, the plaintiff is
required to establish that there is an obligation on the defendants
to indemnify it. The plaintiff
contends that it will, as a matter of
consequence, suffer loss ‘
if’
or ‘should’ Atlega
succeed in its claim against Wakaberry.
[10]
The first and second exceptions are in
all respects similar. It does not appear from the reading of the
particulars of claim that
there is any cause of action sustainable in
that regard. The plaintiff pleaded at paragraph 12 that “
the
claim made in the summons is not reflected in any financial
statements of Wakaberry or in Appendix CC to the sale of shares
agreement”.
In my view, there
is no merit in the plaintiff’s contention that it may suffer
loss because on the facts pleaded, the particulars
of claim do not
state the nexus with sufficient particularity, between the
‘anticipated loss” and the alleged liability
of the
defendants.
[11]
With regards to the third and fourth
exceptions, Mr Wallis submitted that there is no obligation on the
defendants to indemnify
the plaintiff because a declaratory relief
sought by the plaintiff can have no practical effect where there
exist no prospects
of the pleaded events arising. In other words, the
plaintiff has not pleaded that any claim has been made against it.
Counsel for
the plaintiff on the other hand submitted that a
declaratory order will have a practical effect on the parties because
it establishes
a right between them, that is in dispute.
[12]
It should be noted that the
indemnification which the plaintiff seeks, is restricted to damages
which ‘might’ in future
be suffered by Wakaberry. In my
view, the plaintiff’s particulars of claim postulate a
proposition that is bad in law, given
what it stated at paragraph 12.
It is also my considered view that the plaintiff suing
for
damages
should
set
them
out
in
a
manner
that
will
enable
the
defendant reasonably to respond thereto.
[13]
It is therefore imperative that the
plaintiff must, in pleading in its particulars of claim, not ignore
the provision of rule 18(4).
Accordingly, the defendant's fifth
ground of exception displays the defect which appears
ex
facie
the pleadings in that the
plaintiff's particulars of claim lack averments necessary to sustain
the action and as such, are bad in
law. I am therefore satisfied that
the excipients are entitled to an order upholding the exception.
[14]
Both parties have during their
submissions referred to the question whether the plaintiff was
entitled, in terms of the agreement,
to be indemnified for the full
amount of the 100% shares in the company or for its part as a
shareholder that it purchased 70%.
Mr van der Merwe submitted, and
correctly so, that this aspect was not a ground raised or relied on
in the exception. For that
reason, I have desisted from entertaining
the issues which did not fall within the scope of the grounds of
exceptions raised.
[15]
In the circumstances, the following
order is made:
1.
The exception is upheld with costs.
2.
The plaintiff is afforded a period of
fourteen (14) days from date of this order within which to amend the
particulars of claim.
PD.
PHAHLANE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv.
H A van der Merwe
Instructed
by :
FLUXMANS
INC
30
JELLICOE AVENUE, ROSEBANK
Tel:
(011) 328-9367
Email:
mmer@fluxmans.com
/
dpretorius@fluxmans.com
C/O
FRIEDLAND HART SOLOMON & NICHOLSON
MONUMENT
PARK, PRETORIA
Tel:
(012)
424-0200
For
1
st
& 2
nd
Defendants/ Excipient:
Adv. PJ Wallis
Instructed
by :
COX YEATS ATTORNEYS
C/O
COUZYN HERTZOG & HORAK
BROOKLYN,
PRETORIA
Tel:
(012) 460-5090
Date
of hearing :10 May 2022
[1]
Stewart and Another v Botha and Another (340/07)
[2008] ZASCA 84
;
2008 (6) SA 310
(SCA). (See also: First National Bank of SA Ltd v
Perry NO & Others
2001 (3) SA 960
(SCA); Pretorius and Another v
Transport Pension Fund and others
2019 (2) SA 37
(CC).
[2]
2001(3) SA 986(SCA) para 7.
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