Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 657South Africa
John Wright Veneers (SA) (PTY) LTD v Komatiland Forests SOC (PTY) LTD (A133/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 657 (31 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 August 2022
Headnotes
"Interpretation is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a document, be it legislation,.., or contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the particular provision(s) in the light of the document as a whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence. Whatever the nature of the document, consideration must be given to the language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and syntax; the context in which the provision appears; the apparent
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## John Wright Veneers (SA) (PTY) LTD v Komatiland Forests SOC (PTY) LTD (A133/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 657 (31 August 2022)
John Wright Veneers (SA) (PTY) LTD v Komatiland Forests SOC (PTY) LTD (A133/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 657 (31 August 2022)
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sino date 31 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
## APPEALCASENO:A133/2021
APPEAL
CASE
NO:
A133/2021
CASE
NO:
a quo
52088/2018
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
31
AUGUST 2022
In
the appeal between:
### JOHNWRIGHTVENEERS(SA)(PTY)LTDAppellant/Plaintiff
JOHN
WRIGHT
VENEERS
(SA)
(PTY)
LTD
Appellant/Plaintiff
and
## KOMATILANDFORESTS SOC (PTY)
LTD Respondent/Defendant
KOMATILAND
FORESTS SOC (PTY)
LTD Respondent/Defendant
## JUDGMENT:FULLCOURT
JUDGMENT:
FULL
COURT
HOLLAND-MUTER
AJ:
[1]
The appeal before this court arises from
a custom cut agreement entered into
by
the
parties
during
September
2014.
In
terms
of
the
agreement
the appellant would process the saw logs
delivered by the respondent for an agreed processing fee. The
agreement was later amended
by two addendums which increased the
processing fee. The custom cut agreement made provision for a
specific volume of log to be
delivered to the appellant annually.
[2]
It is common cause that the Respondent
breached the said custom cut agreement for
failing to deliver the agreed volume of
log. The Appellant issued summons against the respondent in the court
a quo
for
the breach of the agreement by the respondent failing to deliver the
agreed volume of logs to the
appellant's
premises to be
processed.
[3]
This resulted in a meeting between
representatives of the parties on 14 November 2014. The parties
settled the dispute in principle
during the meeting and the content
of the minutes reflecting what transpired at the meeting is not in
dispute. Three of the
persons
present at this meeting testified during the trial, namely Hannes
Human and Neil Gouws on behalf of the appellant and Lucky
Nonyane on
behalf of the respondent. There were other persons present at the
meeting but they did not testify at the trial. A certain
Mr
Murovhi also testified but his name does
not appear on the minutes of the meeting. Mr Harvey Theron was also
present at the meeting
on behalf of the respondent.
[4]
On 15 November 2016, one day after the
meeting, Mr Nonyane ("Nonyane"), the defendant's Custom Cut
Manager, mailed the
appellant and undertook that the respondent would
deliver 7 800 cubic meters of logs to
the appellant to process during December
2016 and January 2017.
It
needs to be noted that Nonyane was present at the meeting
on 14 November 2014.
[5]
Subsequent thereafter, two letters
drafted by Mr G C Theron on behalf of the respondent were exchanged
between the parties, the
first on 18 November 2016
(''first
letter")
and
the second on 22 November 2016 (
"second
letter'’-
It
can be accepted that he (Theron) was the
person referred to in the
minutes
as Harvey Theron. The two letters contained the alleged terms of the
agreement resulting from the meeting on 14 November
2016.
[6]
The parties differ as to
the exact terms set out
in the two
letters reflecting the settlement
reached at the
aforesaid
meeting. The main bone of contention between the parties is the issue
whether the Respondent would produce and supply
additional log
volumes in December 2016 and January 2017 to bring the levels of log
deliveries to contractually expected volumes
as set out
in par 2.2 in the first letter.
# THE
DIFFERENT CONTENTIONS BY THE PARTIES WITH REGARD TO THE LETTERS:
THE
DIFFERENT CONTENTIONS BY THE PARTIES WITH REGARD TO THE LETTERS:
[7]
The appellant contends that par 2.2 is
indeed one of the terms of the settlement while the respondent
contends that although par
2.2 in the first letter is an undertaking
by the respondent in terms of the settlement to produce and
supply additional volumes in December
2006 and
January
2017 to bring the levels of log delivery to contractually expected
volumes, it is no longer part of the settlement according
to the
second letter but relates to clause 3.3 of the original log cutting
agreement.
[8]
The respondent contends that the second
letter only provides for an adjusted monetary amount (from the amount
of R 2 200 000,00
in the
first
letter to the amount of R 2 SOO 000,00 in the
second letter} and that absence of
par 2.2 (in
the
first
letter} in the second letter is indicative that it
was not part of the settlement reached
at the
mentioned
meeting, resulting in a denial that it
was a material term of the settlement
agreement.
[9]
Both parties agree that the meeting of
14 November 2016 and subsequent
agreement reached is embodied in the two
letters dated 18 and 22 November 2016.
It
is a
mere interpretation of the two letters to determine whether the
challenged par 2.2 in the first letter is indeed a material
term of
the final settlement reached between the parties to
lay the dispute to rest. The dispute
arose
from
the initial custom cut agreement entered into
by the parties on or about 26
September 2014.
## THELEGALPOSITION:
THE
LEGAL
POSITION:
[10]
A settlement or compromise is a contract with the purpose to end or
avoid litigation, whether embodied in a court
order or not. It brings
the dispute to an end. See
Gollach
&
Comperts
(1967)
(Pty)Ltd
v
Universal
Mills
&
Produce Co (Pty )LTD
1978 (1) SA 914
AD;
Georgias v Standard Bank Chartered Finance Zimbabwe Ltd
2000 (1) SA
126
(ZS) at
138-139.
[11]
A compromise is a substantive contract
which exists independently of the original cause of
action that gave rise to the compromise.
The general rules of pleadings,
proving
and
interpreting
the
terms
thereof
apply.
In
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v
Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA
593
SCA
at
[18)
Wallis JA
held that
"Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation,.., or contract, having
regard to the
context provided by reading the
particular provision(s) in the
light of the document as a whole and the circumstances attendant upon
its coming into existence.
Whatever the nature of the document,
consideration must be given
to
the
language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears; the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and the material known to those
responsible for its production."
And
[
26].. In most cases the court is
faced with two or more possible meanings.. and in resolving the
problem, the apparent
purpose of the provision and the
context in which it occurs will be important guides
to
the correct interpretation".
[12]
The effect of a breach of a compromise
will depend on the nature of the agreement. In
Nagar
v Nagar
1982 (2) SA 263
Z
at
268
E
it was held that where the
compromise not subject to a suspensive or resolute condition action
must be brought on the compromise
and there can be no returning to
the original agreement.
# DISCUSSION:
DISCUSSION:
[13]
The parties in the
matter before court are
ad
idem
that the compromise as embodied
in the
two
letters is the
full agreement
on which must be decided. As set out in
the
Edumeni (supra),
the
court has to find the terms agreed to in
the
text of
the two letters. It
is
clear from the second letter that the terms and conditions
contained in the
first letter are part and parcel of
the
offer
but for the increased amount from R 2 200 000,00 in the first
to R 2 500 000,00 in the second. This is
contained in par 2.1 in the first letter increased as set out above.
The second letter
only increased the monetary amount payable by the
respondent towards the appellant. Nothing in the second letter
amends, alter
or delete the contents of par 2.1 of the first letter.
If, as decided above in the
Edumeni
matter, seen within the context of
the two letters and the preceding meeting on 14 November 2016, it
is clear that par 2.1 in the first
letter is an explicit term of the settlement and was not
retracted in the second letter.
[14]
Giving the
ordinary grammar meaning to
the contents of par 2.1 in the first
letter read with par 4 of
the
second letter, there can be no other conclusion that par 2.1 in the
first letter is an integral term of the
settlement agreement. The argument that it
was never the intention of the parties
to
have
additional volumes of log supplied to the appellant during December
2016 does not
reflect
the
agreed
intention of the parties and agreed term as in
par 2.1 of the first letter. This is
also clear from the minutes of the preceding meeting between the
parties on 14 November 2016.
The minutes clearly records
that
Harvey
(Theron)
on
behalf
of
the
respondent
requested
that plantations produce and supply
enough volume for December holidays. Contextualising the
minutes and the
explicit
term in par 2.1 of
the
first
letter, no other interpretation can be given that it
was indeed part of the settlement that
the respondent
would
supply additional volume log to
the
appellant during
December
2016
and
January
2017
to
make
good
the
existing undersupply of log.
[15]
I cannot agree with the court
a
quo
finding that the appellant
failed to prove on a balance of
probabilities that it
was a material term of the settlement
agreement that the respondent would produce and supply to the
appellant 7 800 cubic meters
of log during December 2016 and January
2017. I am of the view that the respondent indeed breached the
settlement agreement as alleged.
[16]
The issue of the
value and credibility of the evidence in
my view also do not impact on the outcome of the
appeal. It
is a question of interpretation of the
agreement. The parties hold different
views
in this regard, but when
interpreting the complete agreement, the
logical and reasonable
interpretation favours the appellant.
The quest by the respondent to try
and
exclude par 2.1 in the first letter as a material term of the
settlement cannot succeed. This matter is not similar to that
in
Dreyer v AXZS Industries 2006 (S) SA
548 SCA at 558
C-G
and
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell Et Cie and Others
2003 (1) SA 11
SCA
at
paras
[S)-[7) and [14)-(15)
to find that
there are two irreconcilable versions and that the appellant's
version, bearing the
onus to
prove, and compared
with that of the respondent, should be
rejected. The interpretation of the agreement, in view
of all the evidence and the minute of
the meeting on 14
November
2016 read with the two letters dated 18 and 22 November 2016, favours
the appellant. Despite contradicting versions on
the terms of the
settlement agreement, the probabilities by far favours the
appellant and
the appeal must succeed.
[17]
Mr Madima on behalf of the respondent
conceded during argument that should the court find in favour of the
appellant, the quantum
of the appellant's claim as calculated by the
appellant in the
amount
of R 2 809 442,96 is not in dispute.
It
is
therefore
not necessary to
dwell
on the issue of
quantum.
# COSTS:
COSTS:
[17]
The fees of
more
than one advocate are allowed on a party and party bill of costs
only
when the court makes such an order.
Uniform Rule 69(2) limits the costs in respect of more than one
advocate on a party and party
scale and the fees of the
additional advocate shall not
exceed one half of those allowed in
respect of
the
first advocate. In total the junior gets
half of the senior's fee but when the junior does most of the work
and the senior does
no more than scan the
work of the junior, the Taxing Master
will look at the junior's brief to assess the
proper fees. See
Taxation
of Costs
in
the Higher and Lower Courts: A
Practical Guide
by
Albert
Kruger and Wilma Mostert, Lexis-Nexis par 15.5.3 page
76.
It is
for the Taxing
Master to assess the
fees in this regard.
[18]
I propose the appea1
to
be
allowed
and
the
order of the court
a
qHo
be set aside and that the
following order be made·
ORDER:
Judgment
is granted in favour of the Plaintiff in the following term :
1
The order of
the court
a
quo
is
set aside
2.
The Respondent is to
pay the Appellant the amount of R 2 809 442,96:
3
Interest
a
tempore more
at the
rate of 10,25% per annum calculated from
(1 February
2017
to date of payment;
4.
Cost of suit for two
advocates subject to the discretion of the Taxing Maxing
as set out
in Uniform Rule 69 (2)
J
HOLLAND-MUTER
Acting
Judge of the Pretoria High Court
I
agree and it is so ordered
## M
Kubushi
M
Kubushi
Judge
of the Pretoria High Court
I
agree
T
BOKAKO
Acting
Judge of the Pretoria High Court
Date
heard: 20 JULY 2022
Judgment:
10 August 2022
APPEARANCES:
Appellant:
Adv
B
P
Geach SC (with
Adv
A
J Schoeman)
geach@geach.co.za
janavanwyk@yahoo.co.za
## KRUSEATTORNEYSINC
KRUSE
ATTORNEYS
INC
robert@rkattorneys>co.za
### Respondent:Adv
T MadimaSC
Respondent:
Adv
T Madima
SC
FASKEN
INC
(Inc in
SA as BELL DEWAR
INC)
tmokele@fasken.com
sino noindex
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