Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 986South Africa
Mellow Shark Productions (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Trade and Industry and Others (81785/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 986 (15 December 2022)
Headnotes
of such evidence. A condonation application was launched in respect of the lateness of the tendering of the expert summary. Condonation is to be granted. The respondents had the opportunity to cross-examine the witness and indeed did cross-examine him. They suffered no prejudice.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mellow Shark Productions (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Trade and Industry and Others (81785/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 986 (15 December 2022)
Mellow Shark Productions (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Trade and Industry and Others (81785/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 986 (15 December 2022)
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sino date 15 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO.: 81785/2017
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED
15/12/2022
In
the matter between:
MELLOW
SHARK PRODUCTIONS (PTY) LTD
(Reg.
No: 2016/262280/07)
Applicant
And
THE
MINISTER OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY First
Respondent
FRANCOIS
TRUTER
(DTI
CHIEF DIRECTOR: SERVICES SECTOR)
Second
Respondent
NELLY
MOLOKWANE
(DTI
DIRECTOR: FILM AND TELEVISION) Third
Respondent
HOLLARD
FILM GUARANTORS
(DIRECTOR:
P M RALEIGH)
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
van
der Westhuizen, J
[1]
This matter reeks of Alice in Wonderland.
[1]
Alice representing Joe Soap and Wonderland, epitomising the ultimate
bureaucracy and the inevitable labyrinth of approbating and
reprobating.
[2]
The applicant commenced proceedings against the respondents by way of
application.
The relief the applicant sought in its application was
primarily specific performance in respect of the terms of an alleged
agreement
entered into by the applicant with the first respondent.
After the exchange of pleadings, it became apparent that a major
dispute
of facts presented. The matter became prone to be case
managed. It was allocated to me for that purpose. During the case
management
process, a directive was issued directing the applicant to
file a statement of claim to which the respondents were to plead
their
case in the form of a response. The matter would then be
referred to trial for the receiving of oral evidence.
[3]
The matter was subsequently set down for trial during November 2021.
However, the
trial could not be finalised due to the first
respondent’s second witness becoming indisposed. Initially the
matter stood
down for a day or two to enable the witness to recover.
Unfortunately that did not occur and the trial was postponed. When
the
trial recommenced during April this year, it could not be
finalised within the allocated time that was set by agreement between
the parties. The hearing of closing argument was postponed to enable
the record of the oral evidence to be transcribed and the
parties to
supplement their respective heads of argument that were already
prepared and filed. The oral evidence was to be included
in those
heads of argument. Closing argument was eventually presented during
November 2022. Judgement was reserved.
[4]
The applicant led the evidence of two witnesses. One was the director
of the applicant
and the second witness was led as an expert witness.
Due notice of the leading of expert evidence was given as well as a
summary
of such evidence. A condonation application was launched in
respect of the lateness of the tendering of the expert summary.
Condonation
is to be granted. The respondents had the opportunity to
cross-examine the witness and indeed did cross-examine him. They
suffered
no prejudice.
[5]
On behalf of the first respondent two witnesses were called, one of
which was the
third respondent. The other an employee of the first
respondent in the relevant department. Both were employees of the
first respondent.
[6]
The fourth respondent was the guarantor for the due compliance of the
obligations
on the part of the applicant, arising from the aforesaid
agreement. It is common cause that the purpose of the fourth
respondent’s
participation in the relationship between the
applicant and the first respondent arose from the agreement between
the applicant
and the first respondent, and was to “protect”
the interests of the first respondent. No relief was sought against
the fourth respondent.
[7]
During the leading of oral evidence, and in particular that on behalf
of the respondents,
the matter evolved from a consideration of the
cause of action for specific performance to an apparent review
application.
[8]
The relief sought in the notice of motion dated 29 November 2017
reads as follows:
“
1.
That the 1
st
RESPONDENT is ordered to pay to the Applicant the amount of
R625 694.60, in respect of the 1
st
production Milestone of the film “Deadly Ocean” reached
on 5 January 2017;
2.
That the 1
st
RESPONDENT is ordered to pay to the Applicant
the amount of R625 694.60, in respect of the 2
nd
production Milestone of the film “Deadly Ocean” reached
on 5 January 2017;
3.
That the 1
st
RESPONDENT is ordered to pay to the Applicant
the amount of R625 694.60, in respect of the 3
rd
production Milestone of the film “Deadly Ocean” expected
to be reached by 30 March 2018, as soon as the goal is reached
and
confirmed by Hollard Film Guarantors;
4.
That the 1
st
RESPONDENT is ordered to pay to the Applicant
the amount of R625 694.60, in respect of the 4
th
production Milestone of the film “Deadly Ocean” expected
to be reached by 30 March 2018, as soon as the goal is reached
and
confirmed by Hollard Film Guarantors;
5.
That the 1
st
RESPONDENT is ordered to pay to the Applicant
the amount of R625 694.60, in respect of the 5
th
production Milestone of the film “Deadly Ocean” expected
to be reached by 31 May 2018, as soon as the goal is reached
and
confirmed by Hollard Film Guarantors;
6.
That the 1
st
RESPONDONT is ordered to pay the Applicant
the amount of R150 000.00 in respect of repayment for the
HOLLARD Completion Bond;
7.
That the 1
st
RESPONDENT is ordered to, in terms of Prayers
1, 2, 3 and 6 to pay interest at a rate of 10% per annum on the
amounts form the
date of the order to the date of payment.
8.
Costs of Suit on a scale as per Attorney and Client.”
[9]
From the foregoing passage it is clear that specific performance was
sought. This
was restated in the statement of case that was
subsequently filed. There was no change in the applicant’s
approach in respect
of its cause of action.
[10]
However, the first respondent in its initial answering affidavit
(which was only filed during
December 2018) took the stance that:
(a)
The
application was premature in view thereof that the Department of
Trade and Industry (dti) had not made a final determination
on the
applicant’s incentive claim;
(b)
That on 29
October 2018 the provisional incentive grant was cancelled due to
alleged non-compliance with the requirements stipulated
in respect
thereof;
(c)
That the claim
by the applicant was rejected in terms of a letter dated 19 November
2018;
(d)
That the
applicant could have recourse to appeal the decision of the DTI.
[11]
In its response to the applicant’s statement of claim, the
first respondent defined the
issue in dispute as follows:
“
The
issue in dispute centres on whether the Department of Trade and
Industry (“dti”) justifiably
terminated
the incentive grant
, which the
applicant had applied for (the grant).”
(My emphasis)
[12]
At best for the respondents, their definition of the dispute amounted
to an allegation that they
had the right to renege on their
obligations in terms of the agreement.
[13]
The applicant gave notice of an intention to amend its notice of
motion by the deletion of all
the prayers and the substitution
thereof with new prayers. The effect of the intended amendment was
the addition of five new prayers
to the initial prayers that were to
be reinserted: the first two new prayers related to declaratory
orders; the third prayer was
an order for the amendment of the
timeframe to 6 months from the date of compliance by the respondents
to make payment of milestones
1, 2, 3, and 4 for completion of the
film; the fourth related to an order that all the parties should
perform fully in terms of
the agreement; and the fifth order was an
alternative to prayers, 2, 3, 4 and 9, wherein an order was sought
that the agreement
was fulfilled after performance of and compliance
to all parties obligation as contained in prayers 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 and
11 in terms
of milestone 4.
[14]
There was no objection nor opposition by the respondents to the
intended amendment. From the
papers filed on CaseLines, it did not
appear whether an application for the amendment was moved, or whether
an amendment to the
notice of motion was effected in the prescribed
manner. In any event, none of the intended new prayers made provision
for the matter
to be reviewed in terms of Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act, 3 of 2000 (PAJA). It remained a contractual dispute.
[15]
There is no merit in the respondents view, and submissions, that this
matter related to a review
application. It is trite law that an Organ
of State, or other juristic entity, could not review its own
decision, and could only
do so in specific circumstances, none of
which were present in this instance. The respondents did not take the
point that the applicant
should have applied for a review of the
first respondent’s “decisions” referred to in its
response to the applicant’s
statement of case.
[16]
This matter solely relates to the agreement and the first
respondent’s alleged reneging
thereon. It remained a
contractual dispute, despite the first respondent’s
protestations that no agreement or contract was
concluded. The first
respondent in terms conceded the conclusion of an agreement by the
language it used in its correspondence
with the applicant, in its
affidavit evidence and written response to the statement of claim. In
that regard, in its letter of
29 October 2018, the applicant was
informed that the “provisional approval” was cancelled.
An approval can only be
withdrawn, or not made final. An agreement or
contract is cancelled. Furthermore, in its initial answering
affidavit the first
respondent repeated that the “provisional
approval” was cancelled. Again, and in its written response to
the statement
of claim, the first respondent defined the issue of
dispute as quoted above. The word “terminated” is used.
Again,
a “provisional approval” is either withdrawn, or
not made final. It is not terminated. That concession puts paid to
the issue of whether an agreement or contract was concluded between
the applicant and the first respondent. I shall deal with the
issue
of “provisional approval” later.
[17]
It may be prudent at this stage to interpolate and consider the
response by the first respondent
that the applicant had recourse to
appeal proceedings. This application relates to a claim for specific
performance in the form
of payment of monies due in terms of the
agreement, not to a “dispute” relating to a “decision”
by the
first respondent. The non-compliance by the first respondent
of its obligations did not constitute a “decision” that
could form the subject of an internal appeal. That approach was a red
herring. An apparent attempt at contriving a defence to the
claims
for payment. It failed.
[18]
During or about 2015/2016, a plan was developed to create a three
part television series with
a working title “Deadly Ocean”.
It would relate to the sharks in the ocean and the obvious menace
they present. In
that regard, an application was submitted in terms
of the South African Film & Television Production and
Co-Productions Incentive
established by the South African Government
for the granting of a rebate in terms of that Incentive. The total
production budget
of the intended production was expected to be
upwards of an amount of R2.5 million.
[19]
The purpose of the said Incentive was to grow the Film and Television
Production industry in
an effort to stimulate economic development,
job creation and its role in facilitating dialogue for national
building as stated
in the Programme Guidelines under the heading:
Description of the South African Film and Television Production
Incentive. The following
was stated:
“
The
South African Film and Television Production Incentive provide for
financial assistance to local productions in the form of
a rebate of
up to 35% of the Qualifying South African Production Expenditure
(QSAPE). No cap will apply for this rebate.”
[20]
The Incentive was to be administered for a period of 3 years, until
2017.
[21]
Programme Guidelines were set for applications under the Incentive.
The respondents made much
of the fact of the Programme Guidelines.
Their approach was that those Guidelines were cast in stone and could
not be deviated
from. This view is gainsaid by the disclaimer
included in the said document which reads as follows:
“
This
guidelines document provides the criteria to assess proposals from
potential film and television projects and the process of
applying
for the incentive. The guidelines are approved and issued by the
Minister of Trade and Industry for the purpose of ensuring
clarity on
the aim and requirements of the incentives programme the dti reserves
the right to amend the guidelines as it deems
appropriate.”
[22]
The word “guideline” is defined in the South African
Concise Oxford Dictionary as
follows;
“
guideline
n. general rule, principle or piece of advice”
[23]
None of the terms defined above provide any support for something
being cast in stone. It was
a mere guide to the application: what it
should include and how it is to be assessed. The fact, as indicated
in the aforesaid disclaimer,
that the dti reserved the right to amend
the programme guidelines as it deemed appropriate, is indicative of
nothing being fixed
or set. In terms of the Guidelines an amendment
thereto could have retrospective effect. It was pliable. A deviation,
within the
appropriate bounds, from the guideline may be appropriate
depending on the circumstances. The respondents approached the
applicant’s
application on that basis. This was evidenced by
the various meetings and discussions that followed on the
“provisional”
approval of the applicant’s
application and the first respondent’s requests for further
documentation, redrafting of
others or amendment of others. If the
Guidelines were rigid as advocated for, non-compliance would result
in refusal of the application
for the grant of the Incentive.
[24]
If the Guidelines were not guidelines proper, the document would in
all probability have read:
“Requirements for the Grant of the
Inventive”. Non-compliance with the requirements would result
in non-approval.
[25]
Further in this regard, if the “final” approval would
only occur after payment of
all the milestones as testified on behalf
of the first respondent, the dti could at any stage “withdraw”
approval resulting
in a production failing with enormous financial
repercussions, job losses and the like. That could never have been
the intention
with the Programme Incentive. This is borne out in note
3 of form A which was prescribed for an application for the grant of
the
Incentive. That note reads as follows”
“
The
provisional approval is subject to the availability of funds.”
[26]
The respondents made heavy weather of the “provisional
approval” of the applicant’s
application. The respondents
submitted in evidence that the “provisional approval”
only became “final”
once all claims were processed and
paid. There is no merit in that approach. Insofar as the approval of
the application is “provisional”,
it is at best a
conditional approval depending on the availability of funds as per
note 3 quoted above.
[27]
That is further borne out under the rubric: Eligibility Criteria,
sub-heading: Commencement.
The first bullet point reads as follows:
“
Principal
photography should not commence until
an
approval letter
has been
received from the dti.”
(My
emphasis)
[28]
What stood to be determined was whether there was compliance with the
guidelines, or at least
substantial compliance therewith.
[29]
Furthermore, the Guidelines do not provide for a “final
approval” to be granted or
obtained. This was a further
indication that the “provisional approval” related to the
availability of funds and nothing
more.
[30]
The rubric: Application Process, refers to four forms, namely a Form
A, in respect of an application
for provisional approval; a Form B,
in respect of Confirmation of Commencement of Principal Photography;
a Form C, in respect of
a Revised Completion Date; and a Form D, in
respect of Claim (Application for Payment). Those forms relate to
different issues
(a)
Form A - deals
with the documents to be submitted to support an application for the
grant of the Incentive;
(b)
Form B –
deals with the documents to be submitted to confirm commencement of
principal photography (Specific forms to accompany
the claim are
listed. None relating to expenditure);
(c)
Form C –
deals with where there would be a revised completion date where that
date would differ from the initial indicated
date;
(d)
Form D –
deals with when a claim is submitted in respect of completion of the
production with an end product and the documents
to support such
claim for payment.
[31]
In terms of clause 4.2 of the Guidelines, it is a formal requirement
that the applicant for the
grant of the Incentive is a Special
Purpose Vehicle (SPV) specifically incorporated for the purpose of
the production of the film
or television project. It was common cause
that the present applicant was such incorporated SPV.
[32]
Further, in terms of clause 14 of the Guidelines, the Incentive
rebate is disbursed on completion
of the production or it may be paid
after reaching certain milestones. Where an applicant wished to make
use of the payment method
after the completion of certain milestones,
there was a formal requirement that a completion bond must be
acquired. In particular,
the applicant’s expert witness, Mr
Raleigh, who was the head of the fourth respondent, testified that
the requirement of
a completion bond was included in the Guidelines
on his insistence, in order to protect the first respondent. He
further testified
that he assisted in drafting the Guidelines. That
evidence was not seriously disputed by the respondents. The fourth
respondent
was established for the very purpose of providing the
requisite completion bond. The fourth respondent was one of six
entities
listed in the Guidelines from which the first respondent
would accept completion bonds.
[33]
Further in that regard, the applicant entered into a completion bond
with the fourth respondent
and acquired the requisite bond. This
occurred on 28 November 2016. This was not disputed by the
respondents. It was common
cause that the applicant obtained a
completion bond. The respondents sought to quibble about the issue of
the payment of the premium.
The completion bond was entered into
between the applicant and the fourth respondent. The first respondent
was not a party to that
bond agreement, and would never be. Whatever
agreement was concluded between the applicant and the fourth
respondent in respect
of the payment of the premium, whether it was
to be deferred, or whether a loan would be granted in that regard, in
no way affected
the first respondent. The fourth respondent confirmed
that a completion bond was concluded and that it existed. That was
confirmed
in writing by the fourth respondent on 5 January 2017.
[34]
The Guidelines stipulate that where use was made of the milestone
payment method, the cost of
the completion bond, which could be as
high as R300 000.00, would be subsidised as follows:
(a)
70% of the
cost of the completion bond will be subsidised for productions
between R2.5 million and R6 million;
(b)
50% of the
cost of the completion bond will be subsidised for productions
between R6 million and R10 million;
(c)
For
productions over R10 million there would be no subsidy.
In
the present instance, the production cost fell within the second
category mentioned above. Accordingly, a subsidy was payable
in the
amount of R150 000.00
[35]
Further in respect of the disbursement of the rebate, the Guidelines
stipulate that the dti will
verify the completeness of the
claim/expenditure before payment is made. That stipulation does not
permit the dti to revisit the
approval once that was granted. All
that was required was that the claim or expenditure has to be
complete. I have already dealt
with the issue of “provisional”.
[36]
Where, as in the present instance, claims were submitted after the
reaching of certain milestones,
all that was required was that the
dti was to verify the completeness of the claim for that specific
milestone. The Guidelines
provided for the following milestones:
(a)
First
milestone - Confirmation of completion bond: 20% payment;
(b)
Second
milestone – Start of principal photography: 20% payment;
(c)
Third
milestone – Completion of principal photography: 20% payment;
(d)
Fourth
milestone – Start of post-production “picture lock”:
20% payment;
(e)
Fifth
milestone – Submission of form D “clean form”: 20%
payment.
[37]
As recorded earlier, the completion bond was entered into and
confirmation thereof was provided
by the fourth respondent. The
applicant subsequently submitted a claim for the payment of the first
tranche relating to the first
milestone. The fourth respondent
confirmed that the milestone was achieved and that payment in respect
thereof could be made. In
that regard, all that the first respondent
was required to do, was to verify whether the completion bond
existed. That was confirmed
and certified by the fourth respondent.
There was no reason why the first payment of 20% of the Incentive
could not be made. Yet
the first respondent did not make the
particular payment. Long after the fact, the first respondent sought
to quibble that the
payment could not be effected, as there was no
“proof of payment of the premium”. In my view, that was
not a legitimate
excuse not to make the payment - confirmation of the
existence of the completion bond was provided. That could easily be
verified.
[38]
The second milestone, that of commencement of the principal
photography, was achieved and in
that regard, confirmation thereof
was provided on 5 January 2017. The fourth respondent certified that
the principle photography
had commenced and that the completion bond
had been concluded. The claim for payment of the second milestone was
submitted by the
applicant also on 5 January 2017. There existed no
reason for not making payment of the second tranche. Also in this
regard, the
first respondent sought to escape its obligation to make
payment for other spurious reasons.
[39]
In view thereof that both the first and second milestones were
achieved and confirmed, the verification
of the “completeness”
could therefor easily be ascertained, simply by considering the
fourth respondent’s certification
thereof. No legitimate excuse
befell the first respondent not to comply with its obligations in
respect thereof. The fourth respondent
was in effect the agent of the
first respondent and no reasons were advanced on behalf of the first
respondent that it should or
could doubt the fourth respondent’s
bona fides
in certifying the achievement of the first two
milestones. The achievement of the first two milestones were factual
in nature and
easily verifiable. Although the first respondent
committed to payment in respect of milestones 1 and 2 on 2 May 2017,
no payment
was forthcoming.
[40]
The first respondent sought to rely on the documentation required to
be supplied in respect of
a claim, as per form D. As recorded earlier
the claims in respect of milestones 1 and 2 required no expenditure
report. Those milestones
related clearly to factual issues, i.e. the
conclusion of a completion bond, and the commencement of principal
photography –
no “proof” of expenditure was
required in that regard. None of the other documents listed in clause
13.4 of the Guidelines
find any application in respect of milestones
1 and 2.
[41]
It follows that the first respondent was obliged to make the two
payments on the submission of
the respective claims in regard
thereto. It failed to comply with its obligations resulting in the
entitlement to claim specific
performance for payment thereof.
[42]
The parties were involved in many discussions and meetings following
on the applicant’s
request for payment of milestones 1 and 2,
and after the commencement of litigation in that regard. During one
of those discussions
and/or meetings, post the commencement of
litigation, the first respondent requested the applicant to submit
the claims for milestones
3 and 4 and to resubmit the claims for
milestones 1 and 2. The applicant obliged and submitted the requested
claims for those milestones.
Unsurprisingly, the first respondent did
not react positively thereon.
[43]
As recorded earlier, milestone 3 related to the completion of
Principle Photography. That milestone
was reached on or about 30
March 2018 - a circumstance of factual nature and easily verifiable.
No report of expenditure in that
regard was required. Nor did any of
the other documents listed in Form D apply.
[44]
Likewise, milestone 4 related to the Start of Post-production. This
milestone was achieved on
or about 30 March 2018. A fact easily
verifiable. It did not involve the requirement of an expenditure
report, nor did any of the
other documents listed on Form D apply.
[45]
It is to be noted that the submission of Form D was required only in
respect on achieving milestone
5, as recorded earlier. The Guidelines
clearly stipulate that on achieving milestone 5, Form D was to be
submitted. Only then was
an expenditure report and other documents
listed on form D required.
[46]
It follows that the first respondent was obliged to “verify”
the completeness of
milestones 3 and 4 and which was easily
verifiable as those two milestones were factual in nature.
[47]
The first respondent was consequently obliged to make payment in
respect of the achieving of
milestones 1, 2, 3 and 4 on the
submission of the claims therefor. However, the first respondent
sought to reject the claims on
19 November 2018 – more than a
year after commencement of the litigation and a month after the
“cancellation”
of the grant of the Incentive on 29
October 2018. None of the “reasons” advanced for the
rejection and cancellation
were valid, as none of those “reasons”
applied in respect of the claims for achieving milestones 1, 2, 3 and
4 as found
earlier in this judgment.
[48]
It is further to be noted that during the cross-examination of Mr
Raleigh, it was conceded on
behalf of the first respondent that the
achievement of the said milestones was not in issue, but that a
particular aspect of the
application for the Incentive, i.e. the
issue of “connected party expenditure” was the real
issue. There is no merit
in that “dispute” as already
indicated earlier in the judgment. It was totally irrelevant to those
claims.
[49]
Accordingly, the first respondent has no defence in respect of the
payment of the achieving of
milestones 1, 2, 3 and 4, either in terms
of the Guidelines, or in law. It follows that the applicant was
entitled to orders for
the payment of the amounts due in respect of
the first four milestones.
[50]
The claim for the 50% subsidy in respect of the costs of the
completion bond refers consideration.
As recorded earlier, the said
production fell within the range of between R6 million and R10
million. The cost of the completion
bond in the present instance was
R300 000.00 and was common cause. The first respondent was
obliged to refund the applicant
in the amount of R150 000.00. It
failed to do so.
[51]
It was testified on behalf of the applicant that due to the
dilly-dallying of the first respondent,
it was obliged to complete
the production of the film at its own cost. Only the first episode
reached a raw post-production level.
That was offered to the first
respondent. It was further testified on behalf of the applicant that
due to the conduct of the first
respondent, another production, by
other producers in the USA, that related to the similar topic of the
present intended production
reached the marketing stage thereof and
consequently the present production was overtaken by events. The
horse had bolted. Accordingly,
the fifth and final
milestone
could not be achieved, i.e. the release to the first respondent of a
final product. The applicant sought that payment
of this milestone be
allowed and that the amount be paid into the trust account of the
applicant’s attorney, pending finalisation
of the end product
and subsequent approval. There was no merit in this request in view
thereof that other considerations would
apply when considering such
claim. This milestone has clearly not been reached and no claim lay
in that regard. Accordingly, the
applicant is not entitled to any
relief in that regard.
[52]
It is to recorded that most of the evidence presented, in the initial
application and during
the trial, related to issues that were
irrelevant to the relevant considerations of this matter. Both the
applicant and the respondents
were at fault. On a purposive reading
of the Guidelines, and in particular in respect of where there is a
reliance on the milestone
payment method, both parties missed the
relevant and applicable principles that were to be considered by the
court. Consequently,
much court time and resources were wasted.
Furthermore, as found earlier, no “decision” by the first
respondent existed
that could form the subject of an internal appeal.
Valuable time, effort and resources were wasted in that regard for
which the
first respondent was to blame. It was a contrived exercise
to circumvent its obligations in respect of the payment for
milestones
1, 2, 3 and 4.
[53]
There remains the issue of costs. On behalf of the applicant it was
submitted that the first
respondent should be mulct with an adverse
costs order, in view of it reneging on its obligations in the manner
as evidenced earlier.
On behalf of the respondents a costs order was
sought against the applicant. The applicant was substantially
successful against
the respondents and no reason exists why the costs
should not follow the event. In my view, the applicant is entitled to
a punitive
costs order.
I
grant the following order:
1.
The first
respondent is ordered to pay to the applicant the amount of
R625 694.60 in respect of claim 1;
2.
The first
respondent is ordered to pay to the applicant the amount of
R625 694.60 in respect of claim 2;
3.
The first
respondent is ordered to pay to the applicant the amount of
R625 694.60 in respect of claim 3;
4.
The first
respondent is ordered to pay to the applicant the amount of
R625 694.60 in respect of claim 4;
5.
The first
respondent is ordered to pay to the applicant the amount of
R625 694.60 in respect of claim 6;
6.
The first
respondent is ordered to pay interest at the rate off 10% per annum
on the amounts appearing in prayers 1, 2, 3, 4, and
5 above;
7.
The first
respondent is to pay the costs of this application, including any
costs that may have been reserved, on the scale as between
attorney
and client.
C J
VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Heard
on: 1
- 9 November 2021
11
& 12 April 2022
24
November 2022
On
behalf of Applicant: J Brenkman
Instructed
by: Eugene
Kruger Attorneys
On
behalf of Respondent: Ms L Mboweni
M
Tjiana
Instructed
by: The
State Attorney
Judgment
delivered: 15
December 2022
[1]
[1]
Written
by Lewis Carroll
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