Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 127South Africa
Venter and Another v Fire Place Studio (12423/2016) [2025] ZAWCHC 127 (18 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
18 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Venter and Another v Fire Place Studio (12423/2016) [2025] ZAWCHC 127 (18 March 2025)
Venter and Another v Fire Place Studio (12423/2016) [2025] ZAWCHC 127 (18 March 2025)
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FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT – Damages –
Subcontractor
or contractor
–
Liability
– Fire resulted from unsafe boxing-in of external flue pipe
– Inclusion of six meters of ceramic blanket
in quotation
suggested its intended use for both fireplace and boxing-in –
Absence of an invoice to plaintiffs supported
conclusion that
party acted as a subcontractor to defendant – Boxed in
outside flue pipe in capacity as a subcontractor
to defendant –
Defendant liable for damages resulting from fire.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
CASE NO: 12423/2016
In
the matter between:
JAN
HARM
VENTER
1
st
Plaintiff
CANDICE
MIA VENTER
2
nd
Plaintiff
and
THE
FIRE PLACE
STUDIO
Defendant
Bench: E.W. Fagan AJ
Heard: 26, 27, 28
November 2024 & 30 January 2025
Delivered: 18 March 2025
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via email and release to SAFLII.
JUDGMENT
FAGAN, AJ
1.
In May 2014 a
contract was concluded between the plaintiffs, Mr Jan Venter and Ms
Candice Venter, and the defendant, The Fire Place
Studio CC (“FPS”).
In terms of it, FPS would install a fireplace in the plaintiffs’
house in Claremont.
2.
The fireplace
was installed. What is described as the “wet work”
on the installation – which meant in this
case bricking in the
new fireplace and plastering the surrounds – was done by a
builder, Mr Roderick Steward, who was subcontracted
by FPS to do so.
Mr Steward also did the work necessary to lead a flue from the
fireplace to the outside. The installation
of the flue pipe
from there to the top of the outside wall and through the eave was
done by Mr Glynn Lindt, an employee of
FPS.
3.
Very early on
the morning of 11 June 2015 a fire broke out, causing damage to the
house.
4.
The plaintiffs
allege that the fire resulted from a poorly-installed boxed-in flue
pipe. They allege that this was the fault
of FPS. They
have claimed in contract, alternatively delict, damages in the amount
of R416 801.48. Mr Rademeyer,
who appeared for the
Venters, did not in argument persist with the delictual claim.
5.
By agreement
between the parties, an order of separation was made on 10 June
2021. What was before me were only the merits
of the Venters’
claim, more particularly the question of whether FPS is liable to the
Venters for damages.
6.
The fireplace
was a built-in wood-burning space heater that was installed in the
lounge. A metal flue pipe led from the heater
through the wall
to the outside, where the flue pipe continued up the wall and through
the eave. The boxing-in took place
on this outside section of
the flue pipe, for aesthetic reasons. The frame of the box was
40 mm pine, which was clad with
Nutec board.
7.
There is no
dispute about the fact of a fire. There is also no dispute that
the fire was caused by the boxing-in of the exterior
flue pipe.
Mr Daniel Joubert, a forensic fire investigator called as an expert
on behalf of the Venters, wrote in his report,
“What should
have been obvious to the installers … were the irrational
inclusion of a wood frame for this box and
also the proximity of the
frame to the exposed sections of the flue pipe.” Mr André
de Beer, a forensic fire
investigator qualified as an expert by FPS,
but who was not in the event called to testify, agreed in his report
with “the
area of fire origin” as described in Mr
Joubert’s report. This agreement was confirmed in the
experts’
joint minute.
8.
What FPS however
says – and this is its sole defence on the merits – is
that it was not contractually responsible for
boxing-in the flue, and
did not do so. According to FPS’s plea, the Venters
concluded a contract with Mr Steward to
box in the flue, and it was
Mr Steward who, in fulfilment of his obligations under that
(separate) contract, provided the materials
and carried out the work.
9.
This raises the
question of the onus. The onus is on the Venters to prove the
conclusion of a contract on the terms alleged
by them, which included
(in the language of the particulars of claim) an obligation on the
part of FPS to box in the outside flue
pipe in a safe manner, using
suitable and safe material. The onus is on FPS to prove the
conclusion of the alleged contract
between the Venters and Mr
Steward.
10.
If the Venters
do not succeed in discharging the onus resting on them, and FPS also
does not succeed in discharging the onus resting
on it, then the
Venters’ claim must fail. This is so, because the
Venters’ claim cannot succeed if they do not
prove that their
contract with FPS included the term about the boxing-in of the
outside flue pipe. It would be irrelevant
that FPS also has not
proved the contract on which it relies as a defence, for it is not
put to a defence.
11.
The contract
relied on by FPS, and the evidence pertaining to it, are however
relevant considerations in determining whether the
Venters have
succeeded in discharging the onus of proving their contract with
FPS. Self-evidently, if I should find that
the Venters
contracted directly with Mr Steward, then he would have performed the
boxing-in work as their contractor and not as
FPS’s
subcontractor. Conversely, if I should find that the evidence
given in support of a contract between the Venters
and Mr Steward was
poor, that would lend support to the Venters’ contention that
Mr Steward was a subcontractor rather than
a contractor.
12.
The Venters
allege a partly oral, partly written contract with FPS. FPS
alleges that the contract was purely a written one.
As far as
the written contract, or the written part of the contract, is
concerned, the parties refer to the same two one-page documents.
The second document contains FPS’s terms and conditions.
It plays no role in the resolution of the parties’ dispute.
13.
The first
document is a quotation from FPS, addressed to the first plaintiff,
Mr Venter, by Mr Donaven Vallender on 27 May
2014. It
lists the items to be supplied, with the price of each, as well as
the cost of installation. The cost of installation
is indicated
as being shared between a building contractor and FPS.
14.
The only item on
the quotation that featured in the evidence is described as “6x
Meter ceramic blanket”, with a price
of R600. The other
aspect of the quotation that is of relevance is that the items do not
include the 40 mm pine and the Nutec
that were used to box in the
outside flue pipe.
15.
The evidence of
Mr Venter was that he was insistent from the outset that the external
flue pipe be boxed in. His first meeting
with Mr Vallender was
at FPS’s showroom in Diep River, where Mr Vallender explained
to him that FPS uses a subcontractor
for installation. They
arranged to meet at the Venters’ house. It was during
that meeting that Mr Venter, according
to his testimony, explained to
Mr Vallender that he did wish to see “this silver monstrosity
of a flue”, but wished
to have a Star Jasmine that was growing
on the stoep taken down neatly and for the flue to be clad so that
the Star Jasmine could
be put back up. Mr Vallender told
Mr Venter that that was doable.
16.
The quotation,
according to Mr Venter’s understanding of it, included the
totality of the work as per his discussions with
Mr Vallender.
Not having time to supervise the project himself, Mr Venter regarded
FPS as “a one-stop shop”.
17.
An invoice was
presented to the Venters by FPS on about 10 July 2014. It was
for a VAT-exclusive amount of R30 273.68,
of which R11 069
was for installation. The latter sum included, according to Mr
Vallender, the amount of R5 800 that
Mr Steward had quoted FPS to do
the wet work. There is an invoice from Mr Steward to FPS, dated
11 July 2014, in that amount.
18.
Mr Venter
initially said that FPS’s invoice had been presented by
Mr Vallender, but was unsure that his memory in that
regard was
correct when it was put to him in cross-examination by Mr Coetsee
(who appeared on behalf of FPS) that it was Mr Lindt
who had
presented the invoice. Mr Vallender’s evidence was that
it was Mr Lindt who had presented the invoice, and
who had returned
the invoice to him. Mr Lindt himself had no recollection of
having done so.
19.
According to Mr
Venter, he advised Mr Vallender (or, in the event, Mr Lindt) that the
work was not yet complete. The second
plaintiff, Ms Candice
Venter, wrote on the invoice that what was “OUTSTANDING”
was “Boxing in of the flue in
Nutec board as discussed and
agreed with Donavon [
sic
]
/ Rod”. Mr Venter testified that although the boxing-in
of the flue had been part of the work to be performed from
the
outset, it was only at this time that there was a discussion about
the material to be used for doing so.
20.
Mr Vallender
denied that the quotation included the boxing-in of the flue.
He testified that there was no discussion when
he visited the
Venters’ home about this, nor was the Star Jasmine discussed.
According to him, FPS simply never quoted
for the boxing-in.
21.
When he received
the invoice with Ms Venter’s annotation from Mr Lindt,
Mr Vallender telephoned Ms Venter and told her
that FPS does not
do boxing-in of flues. There was no further discussion about
this with the Venters. Mr Vallender
has no knowledge about
when the flue was boxed in.
22.
Ms Venter did
not give evidence. Mr Steward did, and he said that Ms Venter
had called him and asked him to box in the outside
flue pipe.
(Later on in his evidence he said that he was standing in the garden
with Ms Venter when she asked him to box
in the flue.) He had
told her what material he intended to use, and she had agreed with
that. He had given her a price.
23.
Mr Steward also
testified that he spoke to Mr Vallender about the boxing-in, because
after he had finished that job, FPS had to
continue the flue flow
through the eave. According to him, the flue was up to the eave
when he did the boxing-in, after which
Mr Vallender and his crew came
to continue the flue in the roof.
24.
As regards the
boxing-in, Mr Steward said that normally he uses about 3 metres of
ceramic blanket to cover the fireplace.
The balance (i.e. of
the 6 metres that had been quoted for) he had used to insulate the
box. Mr Steward testified that the
quotation for 6 metres of
ceramic blanket had included 3 metres for the boxing-in.
25.
Having completed
the boxing-in work, called Ms Venter a few times about payment.
He subsequently dropped an invoice into her
post box, although he did
not have a copy of the invoice, as he had not used his invoice book
for this purpose. About a week
later he was called by Ms Venter
and told that he could come and fetch his money, which he was sure he
did.
26.
On 14 August
2014 the Venters paid the balance due to FPS.
27.
The trial took
place some ten years after the events about which the witnesses
testified. The evidence was for the most part
unreliable.
Mr Rademeyer in his heads of argument on behalf of the Venters for
example identified a number of discrepancies
between what was put to
his witnesses in cross-examination and what was in fact then
testified by FPS’s witnesses.
28.
Thus, it was put
to Mr Venter that Mr Vallender would testify that there had been a
discussion about the boxing-in of the flue during
Mr Vallender’s
first visit to the premises; that Mr Venter had been at the house
when Mr Vallender went to test the fireplace;
that Mr Vallender had
on that occasion again informed Mr Venter that FPS does not box
in flues; that Mr Vallender had presented
the invoice to Mr Venter on
10 July 2014. Mr Vallender confirmed none of this in his own
evidence. Mr Lindt, too, had
no recollection of having
presented the invoice to Ms Venter, despite this having been put to
Mr Venter as Mr Lindt’s evidence.
29.
Regarding Mr
Steward’s evidence, it was put to Mr Venter that he would say
that Mr Steward had made a separate contract with
Mr Venter; that he
had invoiced Mr Venter; and that he had not been paid. Mr
Steward’s own evidence was that he had
dealt exclusively with
Ms Venter, and that he had been paid in cash by her.
30.
I am not
suggesting that the witnesses were intent on misleading the court.
They were however insufficiently alive to the
inherent unlikelihood
of being able to recall, with any real accuracy, events and the
contents of discussions that took place a
decade ago. They
therefore gave evidence with a measure of confidence and a degree of
certainty that was wholly unwarranted
in the circumstances. If
one were to take at face value, for instance, Mr Steward’s
evidence that the installation
by FPS was only completed
after
he had boxed in
the flue, FPS’s case collapses on the basis of the evidence of
its own witness.
31.
We do well to
bear in mind what Leggatt J said in
Gestmin
SGPS SA v Credit Suisse (UK) Ltd and another
[2013]
EWCH 3560 (Comm). Having made the point that the legal system
has not “
sufficiently
absorbed the lessons of a century of psychological research into the
nature of memory and the unreliability of eyewitness
testimony”,
including “that in everyday life we are not aware of the extent
to which our own and other people’s
memories are unreliable and
believe our memories to be more faithful than they are” (para
16), Leggatt J went on to say the
following
(para
22):
“
[T]he
best approach for a judge to adopt in the trial of a commercial case
is, in my view, to place little if any reliance at all
on witnesses’
recollections of what was said in meetings and conversations and to
base factual findings on inferences drawn
from the documentary
evidence and known or probable facts. This does not mean that
oral testimony serves no useful purpose
– though its utility is
often disproportionate to its length. But its value lies
largely, as I see it, in the opportunity
which cross-examination
affords to subject the documentary record to critical scrutiny and to
gauge the personality, motivations
and working practices of a
witness, rather than in what the witness recalls of particular
conversations and events. Above
all, it is important to avoid
the fallacy of supposing that, because a witness has confidence in
his or her recollection and is
honest, evidence based on that
recollection provides any reliable guide to the truth.”
32.
There are not
many contemporaneous documents in this case. There is however
FPS’s tax invoice of 10 July 2014, annotated
by Ms Venter.
What it indicates is that the Venters were of the view that the
boxing-in of the flue was an outstanding item.
It suggests,
further, that there was a discussion and agreement about doing the
boxing-in with Nutec board with both Mr Vallender
and Mr Steward.
33.
In common with
the quotation of 27 May 2014, the invoice reflects 6 metres of
ceramic blanket as an item, twice as much as would
have been needed
or used to cover the fireplace. There is no good explanation
for why this additional metreage of ceramic
blanket was included in
the quotation, other than its intended use being for the boxing-in of
the flue. Mr Steward said that
that was the reason for its
inclusion. The fact that the length of ceramic blanket on the
invoice matches that of the quotation
is indicative of an original
intention to use half the ceramic blanket to cover the fireplace and
the other half to box in the
flue – as Mr Steward testified he
did. (I should point out that Mr Steward’s evidence in
this regard is reliable,
because he was testifying about how much
ceramic blanket would have been used by him to cover the fireplace –
something that
he knows from experience rather than from specific
recall.)
34.
There is one
other relevant item of what might be termed documentary evidence, in
the form of the
absence
of an invoice
from Mr Steward to the Venters. His recollection of not having
used his invoice book for this purpose is unreliable.
Unlikely,
too, is his evidence that he used the invoice book only for invoices
addressed to FPS.
35.
It is true, as
Mr Coetsee argued on behalf of FPS, that Nutec board does not feature
as an item on the quotation or the invoice.
If however the
insulation of the flue pipe was subcontracted to Mr Steward, there
would have been no need for this to be itemised:
it would have been
an item provided by Mr Steward and therefore part of his R5 800
quotation to FPS. In the same way,
the bricks and plaster for
the installation of the fireplace were not itemised.
36.
Mr Venter in his
evidence drew a distinction, which strikes one as a sensible one,
between the original agreement that the flue
pipe would be boxed in
and the later discussion about using Nutec board to do the job.
37.
The sole member
of FPS, Mr Hillel Nachman, testified that although it did not itself
box in flues, FPS had on occasion in the past
employed a
subcontractor to do so. That testimony is consistent with what
is again sensible evidence on the part of Mr Venter:
that he regarded
FPS as a one-stop shop, which would install the fireplace in its
totality, including subcontracting where necessary.
As a fact,
Mr Steward was the subcontractor for one part of the job. Why
not then for another part of the job?
38.
I am satisfied,
on a balance of probabilities, that Mr Steward boxed in the outside
flue pipe in his capacity as a subcontractor
to FPS rather than as a
contractor to the Venters.
39.
Accordingly:
(a)
It is determined
that the defendant is liable to the plaintiffs for the damages
resulting from the fire at their home on 11 June
2015.
(b)
The costs
occasioned by the determination of the merits are to be paid by the
defendant, including the costs of counsel on scale
B.
FAGAN, AJ
APPEARANCES
For
the plaintiffs
Adv.
H Rademeyer
Van
Breda Herbst Attorneys
Cape
Town.
For
the defendant
Adv. D
Coetsee
BDP
Attorneys
Cape
Town.
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