Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 699South Africa
Apex Commodities (Pty) Ltd v Agri Trading Service (Pty) Ltd and Others (18620/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 699 (26 September 2022)
Headnotes
as follows: “[14] The onus is on the party seeking security to persuade a court that security should be ordered. As was the situation under s 13 in the past, a court in the exercise of its discretion will have regard to the nature of the claim; the financial position of the company at the stage of the application for security; and its probable financial position should it lose the action. The distinction to be drawn between the common law and that which prevailed in terms of s 13 is described thus by Brand JA in MTN Service Provider (Pty) Ltd v Afro Call (Pty) Ltd 2007 (6) SA 620 (SCA) paras 15 – 16:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Apex Commodities (Pty) Ltd v Agri Trading Service (Pty) Ltd and Others (18620/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 699 (26 September 2022)
Apex Commodities (Pty) Ltd v Agri Trading Service (Pty) Ltd and Others (18620/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 699 (26 September 2022)
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sino date 26 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No:18620/2018
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
26
SEPTEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
APEX
COMMODITIES (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
AGRI
TRADING SERVICES (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
(in
final liquidation)
JOHANNES
ZACHARIAS HUMAN MULLER N.O.
Second
Respondent
GERT
LOUWRENS STEYN DE WET N.O.
Third
Respondent
HAROON
ABDOOL SATAR MOOSA N.O.
Fourth
Respondent
In
re:
AGRI
TRADING SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
(in
final liquidation)
and
APEX
COMMODITIES (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
STEVEN
HOCHFELD
N.O
. Second
Respondent
Date
of Hearing: 24
November 2021
Date
of Judgment:
26
September 2022
JUDGMENT
BARNES
AJ
Introduction
1.
This is an
application in which the applicant, Apex Commodities (Pty) Ltd
(“Apex”), seeks an order that the first respondent,
Agri
Trading Services (Pty) Ltd (in final liquidation) (“ATS”),
be ordered to furnish security for costs in the sum
of R3 Million, in
respect of the main application instituted by ATS described below.
2.
In addition,
Apex seeks an order that ATS be required to pay the costs of a
joinder application brought by Apex in terms of which
the third and
fourth respondents, who are joint liquidators of ATS with the second
respondent, were joined in this application.
3.
ATS opposes
the relief sought by Apex.
4.
In what
follows, I shall set out, first, the facts giving rise to the main
application in respect of which security for costs is
sought, and
second, the applicable law pertaining to security for costs.
Thereafter I shall consider whether Apex has made out
a case for an
order for security for costs against ATS. Finally, I shall consider
the question of the costs of the joinder application.
The
Main Application
5.
On 1 November
2016, Apex and ATS concluded four SAGOS contracts for the buying and
selling of Bulgarian sunflower meal pellets of
a specified quality
and quantity. During or about March 2017, a dispute arose between the
parties pertaining to these contracts.
6.
On 6 October
2017, ATS referred the dispute arising from the contracts to
arbitration.
7.
Apex took the
view that the referral to arbitration was time barred in terms of
clauses 16.2.2 and 16.2.3 of the contacts (“the
time barring
clauses”) and accordingly, on 20 October 2017, gave notice of
its intention to raise a special plea to this
effect.
8.
On 14 March
2018, ATS launched an application in this Court for the extension of
the time periods referred to in the time barring
clauses in terms of
section 8 of the Arbitration Act 45 of 1965 (“the
Arbitration
Act&rdquo
;). This is the main application.
9.
On 28 November
2019, ATS was placed in final liquidation by the Gauteng Local
Division of this Court.
10.
On 12 October
2020, Apex brought this application for security for costs against
ATS in respect of the main application.
The
Applicable Law
11.
The procedure
in terms of which an application for security for costs is made is
governed by Uniform
Rule 47.
It provides:
“
(1)
A party entitled and desiring to demand security shall, as soon as
practicable after the commencement of proceedings, deliver
a notice
setting forth the grounds upon which security is claimed and the
amount demanded.
…
(4)
The court may, if security be not given within a reasonable time,
dismiss any proceedings instituted or strike out any pleadings
filed
by the party in default, or make such other order as to it may seem
meet.”
12.
The rule,
which deals with the procedure to be followed, applies to all cases
in which security is sought in the High Court. It
deals with
procedure and not with substantive law. For the substantive law on
security for costs regard must be had to the common
law and the
relevant statutory provisions.
13.
The
general rule of our common law, as laid down in
Witham
v Venables,
[1]
is that an
incola
plaintiff
cannot be compelled to furnish security for costs.
14.
However, in
the case of a company, there existed, until recently, an exception to
this general rule. Section 13 of the Companies
Act 61 of 1973
provided as follows:
“
Where
a company or other body corporate is plaintiff in any legal
proceedings, the Court may at any stage, if it appears by credible
testimony that there is reason to believe that the company or body
corporate or if it is being wound up, the liquidator thereof,
will be
unable to pay the costs of the defendant or respondent if successful
in his defence, require sufficient security to be
given for those
costs and may stay all proceedings till the security is given.”
15.
The 1973
Companies Act was repealed and replaced by the
Companies Act 71 of
2008
. The new
Companies Act does
not contain a provision equivalent
to the old
section 13.
1cm; line-height: 150%">
16.
Following
the commencement of the new
Companies Act, there
were several
judgments in which the High Courts had occasion to consider whether,
absent a counterpart to
section 13
in the new
Companies Act, an
incola
company could be ordered to furnish security for costs. Those
judgments, or at least some of them, were discordant on the topic.
[2]
17.
In
2015, the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”) handed down
judgment in
Boost
Sports Africa (Pty) Ltd v South African Breweries (Pty) Ltd
[3]
in
which it clarified the legal position in respect of security for
costs under the new
Companies Act. The
SCA held as follows:
“
[14]
The onus is on the party seeking security to persuade a court that
security should be ordered. As was the situation under
s 13
in the
past, a court in the exercise of its discretion will have regard to
the nature of the claim; the financial position of the
company at the
stage of the application for security; and its probable financial
position should it lose the action. The distinction
to be drawn
between the common law and that which prevailed in terms of
s 13
is
described thus by Brand JA in
MTN
Service Provider (Pty) Ltd v Afro Call (Pty) Ltd
2007 (6) SA 620
(SCA) paras 15 – 16:
‘
Against
an insolvent natural person, who is an
incola
,
so it has been held, security will only be granted if his or her
action can be found to be reckless and vexatious (see
Ecker
v Dean
1938 AD 102
at 110). The reason
for this limitation, so it was explained in
Ecker
(at 111) is that the court’s
power to order security against an
incola
is derived from its inherent
jurisdiction to prevent abuse of its own process in certain
circumstances. And this jurisdiction, said
Solomon JA in
Western
Assurance Co v Caldwell’s Trustee
,
1918 AD 262
at 274, ‘is a power which … ought to be
sparingly exercised and only in very exceptional circumstances.’
(See
also eg
Ramsamy NO v Maarman NO
2002 (6) SA 159
(C) 173 F-I)
In
the exercise of its discretion under
s 13
of the
Companies Act, on
the other hand, there is no reason why the court should order
security only in the exceptional case. On the contrary, as was stated
in
Shepstone & Wylie
(supra) at 1045I – J, since the
section presents the Court with an unfettered discretion, there is no
reason to lean towards
either granting or refusing a security order.’
[15]
Accordingly, in terms of the common law, mere inability by an
incola
to
satisfy a potential costs order is insufficient to justify an order
for security; something more is required
(
Ramsamy
NO and Others v Maarman NO and Another
2002 (6) SA 159
(C) at 172 I – J). As Thring J put it (
Ramsamy
NO
at 172J
– 173A) –
‘
(w)hat
this something is has been variously described in a number of
decisions. Thus in
Ecker v Dean
… it was said … that the basis of granting an order for
security was that the action was reckless and vexatious.’
[16]
Absent
s 13
, there can no longer be any legitimate basis for
differentiating between an
incola
company and an
incola
natural person
. And as our superior
courts have a residual discretion in a matter such as this arising
from their inherent power to regulate their
own proceedings, it must
follow that the former can at common law be compelled to furnish
security for costs.
Accordingly, even though there may be poor
prospects of recovering costs, a court, in its discretion, should
only order the furnishing
of security for such costs by an
incola
company if it is satisfied that the contemplated main
action (or application) is vexatious or reckless or otherwise amounts
to an
abuse
.”
[17]
According to Nicholas J in
Fisheries Development Corporation of SA
Ltd v Jorgensen and Another; Fisheries Development Corporation of SA
Ltd v AWJ Investments
(Pty) Ltd and Others
1979 SA 1331
(W) at
1339 E-F:
‘
In
its legal sense vexatious means frivolous, improper: instituted
without sufficient ground, to serve solely as an annoyance to
the
defendant
(Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary)
. Vexatious
proceedings would also no doubt include proceedings which, although
properly instituted, are continued with for the
sole purpose of
causing annoyance to the defendant; abuse connotes a mis-use, an
improper use, a use mala fide, a use for an ulterior
motive.’
In
African Farms and Townships Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
1963
SA 555
(A) at 565D – E Holmes JA observed:
‘
An
action is vexatious and an abuse of the process of court i
nter
alia
if it is obviously
unsustainable. This must appear as a certainty, and not merely on a
preponderance of possibility.
Ravden v Beeten
1035 CPD 269
at p 276; Burnham v Fakheer
1938 NPD 63.
’”
(Emphasis
added)
18.
What is clear
from the above is that before a Court may exercise its discretion to
order security for costs it must be satisfied
not only that the party
against whom the order is sought would, if unsuccessful in the main
application, be unable to satisfy an
adverse costs order, but also
that the main application is vexatious, reckless or otherwise amounts
to an abuse.
19.
I will
consider each of these legal requirements in turn below.
Would
ATS be unable to satisfy an adverse costs order?
20.
ATS, in
opposing this application, provided an extract from the estate bank
account from which it is evident that, as at 13 January
2021, the
estate bank account held the amount of R11 167 313.61 to its credit.
21.
Apex, however,
contends that that this pales into insignificance when weighed
against the deficiency of assets reflected in the
estate’s
statement of affairs, which is to the tune of R175 622 422.24. Apex
contends further that it will rank as a concurrent
creditor, and as
such will have no prospect whatsoever to be paid from a deficit in
excess of R164 million.
22.
ATS, for its
part, contends that since the estate account has funds of R11 167
313.61 available, it cannot be regarded as the proverbial
“empty
shell” against which a presumption can be made that the main
application is vexatious or reckless and that it
would be unable to
satisfy an adverse costs order.
23.
ATS contends
further that while all legal costs incurred by Apex up until the
liquidation of the company, would be treated as a
concurrent claim in
its estate, all legal costs incurred
after
the company’s liquidation would be treated as part of the costs
of the administration of the liquidated estate and would
consequently
be payable from the amount currently in the estate’s bank
account, prior to any payment to creditors.
24.
There appears
to me to be merit in ATS’s submissions and I am not convinced
that, on the evidence before me, it can be concluded
that ATS would
be unable to satisfy an adverse costs order against it.
25.
It is,
however, not necessary for me to finally decide this question. This
is so because, even if I were to conclude that ATS would
be unable to
satisfy an adverse costs order against it, Apex is, in my view,
unable to establish the next requirement, that is,
the requirement
that the main application brought by ATS is vexatious, reckless or
otherwise amounts to an abuse.
26.
It is to a
consideration of this requirement that I now turn.
Is
the main application vexatious, reckless or otherwise abusive?
27.
The provision
of the SAGOS contracts which is central to the main application
launched by ATS is clause 16. It provides as follows:
“
16
Time limits and mandatory procedures for pursuing any claim
16.1
The parties
affirm that it is necessary that any dispute between them
should be notified without delay and then pursued
promptly. They
therefore agree that, unless a party making a claim does so in
accordance with time limits specifically relating
thereto, as set out
elsewhere in this document, or if no specific time limits apply, then
in accordance with the requirements of
clause 16.2, such claim shall
be barred and deem to have been waived and abandoned for all purposes
whatsoever.
16.2
……
16.2.1
This clause
regulates the time limits for making and pursuing any claim where
such time limits are not specifically set out elsewhere
in this
document.
16.2.2
Any claim for
any failure to deliver the commodities in accordance with this
contract must, if such failure was not, and would not
have been,
apparent from a reasonable inspection on delivery be notified in
writing to the other party within 28 consecutive days
from the last
day of the period of delivery and thereafter, if such claim has not
been settled, then it must be referred in writing
to the AFSA
secretariat within 21 consecutive days from the date of such
notification to the other party.
16.2.3
Any claim for
any failure to perform in terms of this contract shall be notified in
writing to the other party within 28 consecutive
days from the date
on which the other party could reasonably have become aware of such
failure. Thereafter it must be referred
in writing to the AFSA
secretariat within 21 consecutive days from the date of such
notification to the other party.”
28.
It
is common cause that ATS did not comply with either the 28 day period
or the 21 day period stipulated in the clauses above. As
stated
above, this gave rise to Apex’s special plea to the effect that
the arbitration was time barred and to
ATS’s
application in this Court to extend the time periods stipulated in
the contracts (“the main application”).
The main
application is brought in terms of
section 8
of the
Arbitration Act
which
provides as follows:
“
8
Power of court to extend time fixed in arbitration agreement for
commencing arbitration proceedings
Where
an arbitration agreement to refer future disputes to arbitration
provides that any claim to which the agreement applies shall
be
barred unless some step to commence arbitration proceedings is taken
within a time fixed by the agreement, and a dispute arises
to which
the agreement applies, the court, if it is of the opinion that in the
circumstances of the case undue hardship would otherwise
be caused,
may extend the time for such period as it considers proper, whether
the time so fixed has expired or not, on such terms
and conditions as
it may consider just but subject to the provisions of any law
limiting the time for commencing arbitration
proceedings.”
29.
Apex’s
argument is that while
section 8
of the
Arbitration Act affords
a
Court the discretion to extend the second time period referred to
above (viz, the 21 day period within which the dispute must
be
referred to arbitration) it does not afford a Court the discretion to
extend the first time period (viz, the 28 day period within
which the
dispute must be declared).
30.
As
authority for this proposition, Apex relies on the judgment of
Wilmington
(Pty) Ltd v Short & McDonald (Pty) Ltd
[4]
in which the Court held:
“
The
creation of a dispute is a condition precedent to the commencement of
arbitration proceedings. It is not a step which is taken
to commence
arbitration proceedings. It is only when a dispute actually arises
between the parties that arbitration proceedings
can be commenced
and, accordingly, that some step can be taken to commence
proceedings.”
[5]
31.
The Court in
Wilmington
held further, with reference to
section 8
of the
Arbitration Act:
“
What
s 8
deals with is a step which must be taken in terms of the
agreement to commence arbitration proceedings after a dispute has
arisen
between the parties and not a step which might be taken before
it can be said that a dispute has arisen which in terms of the
agreement
may form the subject matter of arbitration proceedings.”
32.
Apex contends
that it is accordingly clear that
section 8
of the
Arbitration Act
does
not afford the Court a discretion to extend the first time
period in terms of clause 16 of the SAGOS contracts and that ATS’s
main application is accordingly unsustainable in the sense of being
vexatious, reckless or otherwise amounting to an abuse.
33.
ATS, for its
part, disputes this. It contends that the notice which it was
required to dispatch to Apex within 28 days in terms
of clause 16 of
the SAGOS contracts constituted “some step”
within the meaning of
section 8
of the
Arbitration Act and
that a
Court accordingly has a discretion to extend this time period.
34.
ATS
points out further that the
Wilmington
judgment on which Apex relies was handed down in the
pre-constitutional era and that questions of interpretation of
contract now
fall to be dealt with reference to the judgments in
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[6]
and
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees, Oregon Trust and Others.
[7]
In
Beadica
the Constitutional Court confirmed that public policy imports values
of fairness, reasonableness and justice and that these
values
underlie and inform the substantive law of contract.
[8]
The Constitutional Court confirmed further that where a contractual
term, or its enforcement, is so unfair, unreasonable or unjust
that
it is contrary to public policy, a Court may refuse to enforce it.
[9]
35.
ATS contends
further that Apex’s approach is overly simplistic and fails to
take account of the judgments in the post Constitutional
era which
have effectively held that the pre-constitutional privileging of
pacta sunt
servanda
is no longer appropriate under a constitutional approach to judicial
control of enforcement of contracts.
36.
It seems to me
that the true issue may be the proper constitutional interpretation
of
section 8
of the
Arbitration Act (and
whether
Wilmington
falls to
be re-visited in the new constitutional era).
Prima
facie,
this appears to be question of whether the
Wilmington
interpretation may violate the right of access to courts under
section 34 of the Constitution, rather than a question of fairness
in
contracts or
pacta
sunt servanda.
37.
In
any event, I note that in
Hillary
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Roads Agency Limpopo (Pty) Ltd
,
[10]
Prinsloo J, appears to have expressed some doubt as to whether
Wilmington
was correctly decided (even without reference to constitutional
principles).
[11]
It may be
therefore that the constitutional issue does not even arise.
38.
All
things considered, I am of the view ATS’s contentions are not
without merit. While the main application may involve complex
questions pertaining to the interpretation of
section 8
of the
Arbitration Act and/or
section 16
of the SAGOS contracts themselves,
given the constitutional context within which such interpretation
must now take place, ATS’s
arguments may well prevail. It
cannot therefore be said, in my view, that the main application is
unsustainable in the sense of
being vexatious or reckless. It must be
emphasised that vexatious and reckless in this context means
“
improper,
instituted without sufficient ground, to serve solely as an annoyance
to the defendant”
and “
an
action [or application] is vexatious and an abuse of the process of
the court inter alia if it is obviously unsustainable. This
must
appear as a certainty, and not merely on a preponderance of
probability.”
[12]
39.
In my view,
the main application cannot remotely be said to be “
improper”
or “
obviously
unsustainable
”
in the above sense. For this reason alone, Apex’s application
for security for costs cannot be granted.
40.
It remains to
deal with the question of the costs of the joinder application.
The
costs of the joinder application
41.
Apex contends
that ATS took the “
obviously
unsustainable”
point of non-joinder of the first respondent’s co-liquidators
and that this necessitated the “
incurrence
of wasted costs”
in the bringing of the joinder application by Apex. Apex seeks an
order that ATS pay these costs on the opposed scale despite the
fact
the joinder application was unopposed.
42.
I fail to
understand Apex’s contention that the non-joinder point was
“
obviously
unsustainable.”
As
ATS correctly points out, Apex was indeed obliged to cite all the
liquidators in its application. Moreover, Apex brought the
joinder
application when the point was raised by ATS, which application was
not opposed by ATS.
43.
Given that the
joinder application was necessary and unopposed, I am of the view
that Apex is not entitled to the costs thereof.
44.
In the
circumstances, I make the following order:
Order
1.
The
application for security for costs is dismissed with costs.
2.
The
application for an order directing the first respondent to pay the
costs of the joinder application is dismissed with costs.
BARNES
AJ
Appearances:
For
the Applicant: Adv
P Sieberhagen
For
the Respondents: Adv
A J Wessels
[1]
(1828)
1 Menz 291.
[2]
See
in this regard the judgments cited in footnote 10 in
Boost
Sports Africa (Pty) Ltd v South African Breweries (Pty) Ltd
2015
(5) SA 38 (SCA)
[3]
2015
(5) SA 38 (SCA)
[4]
1966
(4) SA 33
(D & CLD)
[5]
At
34D -E
[6]
2007
(5) SA 323 (CC).
[7]
2020
(5) 247 (CC)
[8]
At
para 73.
[9]
Beadica
at
para 79.
[10]
2011
JDR 0984 (GNP)
[11]
At
paras 112 and 113.
[12]
Boost
Sports Africa
,
cited above, at para 17.
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