Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 199South Africa
Quality Medical Supplies (Pty) Ltd v Medical Diagnostech (Pty) Ltd (Reasons) (16343/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 199 (13 May 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Quality Medical Supplies (Pty) Ltd v Medical Diagnostech (Pty) Ltd (Reasons) (16343/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 199 (13 May 2025)
Quality Medical Supplies (Pty) Ltd v Medical Diagnostech (Pty) Ltd (Reasons) (16343/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 199 (13 May 2025)
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sino date 13 May 2025
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No:
16343/2021
In
the matter between:
QUALITY
MEDICAL SUPPLIES (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
MEDICAL
DIAGNOSTECH (PTY)
LTD
Defendant
REASONS IN TERMS OF
RULE 49(1) (c)
RK PARKER AJ
Introduction
[1]
In this matter, the parties, concluded an agreement in terms of which
the defendant
will manufacture, sell and deliver surgical scrub to
the plaintiff. Due to the defective and poor quality of the surgical
scrub,
the plaintiff claimed a refund in the amount of R1 081
068.08, together with transportation costs in the amount of
R 123 912.50
of which the latter claim was withdrawn.
[2]
Defendant delivered a counterclaim in the amount of R500 000.00 for
the purchase of
raw materials which it incurred to manufacture the
plaintiff’s products; however, this claim was also withdrawn.
Issues for
determination
[3]
The issues for determination, were:
3.1
The terms of the agreement between the parties.
3.2
Who provided the formula for the manufacturing of the products?
3.3
Whether there was an agreement to modify the formula for the
manufacturing of the product.
3.4
If there was such an agreement, who was responsible for the costs of
the modification
3.5
Any direct or indirect consequential loss or damage caused by the
defective product and
the defendant’s liability if there was.
3.6
The terms of the credit notes issued by the defendant to the
plaintiff.
3.7
The plaintiff’s refusal to accept the replacement of the
returned products by the
defendant.
3.8
The quantum of the plaintiff’s claims.
Common cause facts
[4]
The locus standi and jurisdiction were not in issue. It was common
cause that in July
2020 the plaintiff represented by Shanton Naicker
(hereinafter referred to as “Naicker”), and the defendant
represented
by Ashley Uys concluded an agreement. On 16 July 2020
plaintiff paid an initial deposit of R50 000.00. The plaintiff
approved samples
delivered by defendant to it. On 29 July 2020 the
plaintiff placed an order for 35000 units of skin disinfectant and
45000 units
of surgical scrub to a total value of R2 656 500.00.
On 31 July 2020 plaintiff paid the defendant an amount of R1 328
250.00 representing a 50% deposit of the amount of the purchase
order. Subsequently plaintiff made two further payments to the
defendant in the amount of R 472 606.00 on 8 September 2020 and R805
644.00 on 20 October 2020. Defendant agreed to replace free
of charge
any products found to be defective by its laboratory. Between August
2020 and March 2021, the plaintiff returned 22099
units of the
surgical scrub to the defendant.
[5]
At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, defendant brought an
application for
absolution from the instance. Both parties duly
delivered their heads of argument, and the absolution of the instance
was granted
on 28
th
February 2025, in favour of the
defendant with the plaintiff to bear the defendant's costs of suit on
a party and party scale including
the costs of counsel where so
employed.
[6]
On 7
March 2025 plaintiff sought reasons for the order
handed down on 28 February 2025 in terms of Rule
49(1)(c). What follows
are therefore the reasons for the order.
[7]
For the sake of convenience the parties shall be cited as named in
the main action.
[8]
Plaintiff based its claim on a single oral agreement concluded
between the parties'
respective representatives during July 2020,
inter alia, for the following:
8.1
defendant will manufacture, sell and deliver goods to wit, 70%
alcohol skin disinfectants
and Chlorhexidine gluconate 4% solution
(surgical scrub)
8.2
the surgical scrub would conform to similar products used in the
market, both in appearance
and quality, namely a thick liquid pink in
colour that foams once used
[9]
Defendant delivered samples of the surgical scrub to plaintiff who
was satisfied and
accordingly approved the samples, resulting in the
29 July 2020 order.
[10]
Plaintiff pleaded that after it transported and delivered the
surgical scrub to its client’s
in, inter alia Mpumalanga,
plaintiff received complaints that the product was defective, more
particularly the scrub was of poor
quality, was watery, began to
change colour and with the last batch, had a foul odour.
[11]
About 22 099 units of products were returned to defendant, for
which the plaintiff was furnished
with credit notes on 23 March 202
in the amount of R96 000 and on 31 March 2021, in the amount of R614
987.80, respectively. These
being the credit notes issued by
defendant to plaintiff. It is not to be confused with credit notes
issued by plaintiff to its
clients.
[12]
Plaintiff did not wish to conduct any further business with defendant
and demanded the refund
in the amount of R 1 081 086.08.
[13]
Defendant argues that plaintiff did not allege any breach of contract
in its particulars of claim,
instead, relied upon a single oral
agreement and argued that its claim was in respect of a breach of
agreement between the parties.
Sample A
[14]
Plaintiff called one witness, namely Mr. Naicker, who testified that
the first sample referred
to as sample A, which was sent during July
2020, was approved by the plaintiff, thus and after delivery of the
agreed product,
defendant had complied with its obligations in terms
of the July 2020 agreement to plaintiff. Naicker's testimony
was that
the plaintiff was not satisfied with it, resulting in the
plaintiff returning it.
Sample B
[15]
Plaintiff requested defendant to modify the product, which according
to defendants, is a further
agreement which the defendant argued is
agreement number two, which, the plaintiff has not pleaded in its
particulars of claim.
This caused defendant to have developed three
more samples containing foaming agent concentrations of 5%, 8% and
10% respectively.
This batch was sent to plaintiff during September
2020, which was referred to as sample B. Yet again, these samples did
not measure
up to plaintiff’s satisfaction.
Sample C
[16]
This caused defendant to have developed a 9% foaming agent referred
to as sample C, which was
accepted by plaintiff. The stock in
the possession of the plaintiff during October 2020, was returned to
the defendant in
order to modify it in accordance with sample C.
New terms and
conditions
[17]
However, of importance, on 30 October 2020 defendant provided
plaintiff with new terms and conditions
for the plaintiff’s
acceptance, which terms were duly accepted by the plaintiff. On 6
November 2020 a sample was provided
by defendant to plaintiff
modified from the stock that had been returned to it intended to
conform with sample C, this, Naicker
specifically conveyed to
plaintiff's clients and was exactly the same composition as sample C
which plaintiff had previously approved.
Despite acceptance of the
sample this too was then rejected by plaintiff on the basis that the
latest complaint it had received
from its clients were that the
product “does not make a proper lather and that it was not very
soapy.”
Sample D
[18]
This resulted in yet a further sample D being modified, which sample
was once again accepted
by the plaintiff; however, it was also
followed with a rejection on 12
April 2021, alleging that
the product had gone off, prompting the plaintiff in demanding
the return of the amount claimed
in the amount of R1 081 068.08.
Two distinct
agreements
[19]
Defendant argued that it appeared that there were two distinct
agreements the plaintiff had,
namely, one with the defendant, and
then one with its client. The latter, as conceded by Naicker,
was that the plaintiff’s
clients was not part of the agreement
in respect of the supply of the scrub. Defendant duly fulfilled its
obligation when the plaintiff,
on its own version, was satisfied and
approved the sample. At this juncture once the sample has been
approved, defendant argued,
that it has fulfilled its obligation
towards plaintiff who was the only party it contracted with. The
dissatisfaction of the scrub
appears to be lying elsewhere as it was
the plaintiff's clients who were not satisfied with the end product,
which cannot be said,
as correctly argued by the defendant to
constitute a breach of contract between the plaintiff and defendant.
After all, when the
samples were provided to plaintiff, it was
satisfied with the product sample.
Evaluation
[20]
The evidence presented to the court was vastly different to what the
plaintiff averred in its
amended particulars of claim. Plaintiff
relied on a single agreement.
[21]
Defendant had complied with its obligations in terms of the first
agreement and anything that
happened thereafter therefore had to be
in terms of the new or further agreements entered into between
plaintiff and defendant
which has not been pleaded in the particulars
of claim. There are no allegations of any further or additional
agreements entered
into between the parties as well as defendant’s
compliance with them.
[22]
In the final analysis of Naicker’s evidence, plaintiff’s
client was not satisfied
with sample A, (after plaintiff accepted the
sample provided). This led to defendant making modifications to the
product on plaintiff’s
specific instant and request resulting
in a sample C, which too was initially accepted by plaintiff. This
constituted a further
agreement, namely the second agreement, and or,
a variation of the first agreement as defendant had already complied
with its obligations
in terms of the first agreement. When the stock
was returned to defendant to be modified to conform with sample C,
this gave rise
to the third agreement. However, this time defendant
agreed to attend to the modification of the product with terms and
conditions
which were accepted by plaintiff. Once again, plaintiff
repudiated the second agreement.
[23]
Once again, plaintiff repudiated the second agreement giving rise to
a fourth agreement and the
production of a sample D, which plaintiff
again approved. This can be seen from the WhatsApp conversation
between the parties which
is evident that the parties agreed that the
modification would be reduced to 3% and not 4% to achieve the desired
result, based
on plaintiff basing its case on the first agreement.
After reaching the fourth agreement, and the acceptance of sample D,
plaintiff
repudiated this last agreement, by conveying its wishes
“not to do business with defendant anymore” and claiming
the
refund of monies paid by defendant based on the credit notes
issued by the defendant.
[24]
I agree with the defendant, that in terms of the chronology as
confirmed by Naicker, it became
clear that the case pleaded by the
plaintiff and which the defendant has defended to meet, is completely
different to what the
evidence proves.
[25]
The evidence given to court based on the host of modifications and
subsequent agreements were
not pleaded by plaintiff. It
therefore follows that upon a reasonable consideration of the
evidence, it cannot be found that
the plaintiff has proven the case
it pleaded. As stated earlier, although the defendant witnesses
have not testified, on
the version which was before the court, it
follows that defendant had performed its obligation in terms of any
new and further
specific instance and the requests made by plaintiff
which culminated in the reaching of the further agreements.
[26]
It was in fact plaintiff who repudiated every one of the agreements
by first accepting the samples
in terms thereof and then rejecting
it. The defendant argued that the rejection cannot be held to
constitute a breach by
defendant of such agreements which it says in
any event was not pleaded by plaintiff in its particulars of claim
and rather constitute
a repudiation of such further agreements by
plaintiff.
[27]
In contrast it was the argument proffered by plaintiff that the three
agreements concluded after
July 2020 as having not been pleaded by
plaintiff is not correct on the basis that there has been only one
single agreement between
the parties. I could not agree, although the
plaintiff argued that any subsequent actions by the defendant to
rectify or modify
the surgical scrub have been in a desperate and
futile attempt to fully comply with its obligations in terms of that
one agreement.
After all, and right to the end, plaintiff
approved all of the samples.
[28]
Insofar as the disclaimer which defendant relies upon, plaintiff
avers that defendant did not
tender it in its plea to replace the
defective product based on the above. It is clear that the defendants
action, that it accepted
the plaintiff's cancellation and elected not
to rely on the indemnity contained in the invoice and that such
tender was never put
to Naicker during cross examination and
accordingly plaintiff believes that absolution of the instant should
not be granted as
there is now an evidentiary burden on the defendant
to present evidence that the bulk product was of exactly the same
quality as
the approved samples. The plaintiff argued that there was
no evidence that the defendant offered to replace the product that
and
that plaintiff refused to accept this tender.
Credit notes
[29]
Turning to the credit notes which plaintiff relies upon as its claim
as the sum total from defendant,
in the sum of R 1 081 068.08,
being the credit notes issued by plaintiff to its clients.
[1]
On the contrary the credit notes issued by defendant to plaintiff
totalled an amount of R 710 987. 80
[2]
. The evidence by Naicker on whether plaintiff
should be entitled to be refunded by the defendant based on the
credit notes which was issued by the defendant to plaintiff ,
he conceded that the credit notes contained a clause in terms
whereof
defendant’s liability in the respect thereof to replace any
products found to be defective to be free of charge and
this would be
the sole extent of defendants liability for defective products.
Furthermore, it stated that defendant would not be
held liable for
any direct or indirect consequential loss or damage of products.
[30]
It therefore follows that plaintiff’s reliance on the credit
notes to establish an amount
which defendant is liable for payment is
incorrect. Worse, the plaintiff has not pleaded in its amended
particulars of claim that
defendant has breached the agreement, yet
it proceeds to claim the amount it credited to its clients as the
amount the defendant
must refund the plaintiff.
[31]
Put differently, Naicker’s evidence in this regard was that the
plaintiff was entitled
to a refund in terms of the credit notes which
were issued, however plaintiff has not claimed this amount in its
particulars of
claim, instead it claimed for the amount of the credit
notes it supposedly issued to its clients.
The
test for absolution from the instance
[32]
Given the evaluation of the above, measured against the test for
absolution from the instance
the arguments presented by both counsels
correctly reflected on the test to be applied, the rules and legal
authority when a court
considers an application for absolution from
the instance
.
In
terms of rule 39 (6) the test to be applied when deciding whether or
not to grant absolution from the instance,
[3]
echoed in
Gordon
Lloyd Page & Associates v Rivera and Another
[4]
“…
the
test to be applied is not whether the evidence led by plaintiff
establishes what would finally be required to be established,
but
whether there is evidence upon which a Court, applying its mind
reasonably to such evidence, could or might (not should, nor
ought
to) find for the plaintiff.
…
This implies
that a plaintiff has to make out a prima facie case – in the
sense that there is evidence relating to all elements
of the claim –
to survive absolution because without such evidence no court could
find for the plaintiff.”
[33]
Absolution of the instance may be granted at the conclusion of a
plaintiff’s case, if the
plaintiff has failed to adduce
sufficient evidence upon which a reasonable court could grant
judgment in favour of a plaintiff,
or the plaintiff has failed to
produce sufficient evidence to establish a prima facie case, in other
words, a case in which all
the elements of the claim have been
proven.
[34]
Absolution from the instance is in conflict with the legal principle
of audi alteram partem,
which stipulates that no person may be judged
without a fair hearing in which each party is given the opportunity
to respond to
the evidence against them. Consequently, is
granted
sparingly, certainly not
lightly,
or on the basis of flimsy reasons. It should only be granted
where the plaintiff’s case is so weak that no
reasonable court
can find for plaintiff and a court should not order absolution where
it is in the interests of justice.
Plaintiff’s
counsel relied on additional authority in this division by Gamble J,
in Van Zyl N.O. obo A.M v MEC for Health,
Western Cape Provincial
Department of Health, lean on the side of allowing the case to
proceed.
Conclusion
[35]
The evaluation of the claims made by the plaintiff in its particulars
of claim and the evidence
presented will determine whether the
plaintiff successfully countered the defendant's absolution from the
instance.
[36]
In the result plaintiff has failed to make out a case for claiming
the quantum it has claimed
and in any event Naicker admitted the
terms of the credit note in terms of whereof defendant’s
liability and respect
thereof , to replace any products found
to be defective to be free of charge and this would be the sole
extent of defendant’s
liability for defective products and the
defendant would not be held liable for any direct or indirect,
consequential loss or damage
of product.
[37]
As foreshadowed above, Naicker’s evidence cannot be said to
support the case pleaded by
plaintiff. His evidence does not place
any evidentiary burden upon defendant in the matter. Plaintiff
therefore has failed
to discharge the onus upon it for a finding in
its favour and accordingly the absolution from the instance was
granted.
Parker AJ
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Appearances:
Plaintiffs’
counsel:
Adv. A. du
Plooy
082 924
9076 /
awiedp@gmail.com
Plaintiff’s
attorney:
Ryan James
& Associates
076 685
4445 /
ryan@rjandassociates.co.za
/
lean@meattorneys.co.za
Defendants’
counsel:
Adv. D. Rabie
072 282
9803 /
djrabie@capebar.co.za
Defendants’
attorney:
Marais Muller Hendricks Inc.
(021)
943 3000 / merlin@mmh.law
[1]
para
14 Particulars of Claim
[2]
para
17 Particulars of Claim
[3]
Erasmus,
Superior Court practice RS24
,
2024,
D1 Rule 39-15 to Rule 39-16
[4]
Gordon
Lloyd Page & Associates v Rivera and Another
2001 (1) SA 88
(SCA) at 92F-H. See also Claude Neon Lights (SA) Ltd v Daniel
1976
(4) SA 403
(AD) at 409G-H
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